fbpx
Wikipedia

Electrolytic capacitor

An electrolytic capacitor is a polarized capacitor whose anode or positive plate is made of a metal that forms an insulating oxide layer through anodization. This oxide layer acts as the dielectric of the capacitor. A solid, liquid, or gel electrolyte covers the surface of this oxide layer, serving as the cathode or negative plate of the capacitor. Because of their very thin dielectric oxide layer and enlarged anode surface, electrolytic capacitors have a much higher capacitance-voltage (CV) product per unit volume than ceramic capacitors or film capacitors, and so can have large capacitance values. There are three families of electrolytic capacitor: aluminium electrolytic capacitors, tantalum electrolytic capacitors, and niobium electrolytic capacitors.

Most common styles of aluminium and tantalum electrolytic capacitors
An assortment of electrolytic capacitors

The large capacitance of electrolytic capacitors makes them particularly suitable for passing or bypassing low-frequency signals, and for storing large amounts of energy. They are widely used for decoupling or noise filtering in power supplies and DC link circuits for variable-frequency drives, for coupling signals between amplifier stages, and storing energy as in a flashlamp.

Electrolytic capacitors are polarized components because of their asymmetrical construction and must be operated with a higher potential (i.e., more positive) on the anode than on the cathode at all times. For this reason the polarity is marked on the device housing. Applying a reverse polarity voltage, or a voltage exceeding the maximum rated working voltage of as little as 1 or 1.5 volts, can damage the dielectric and causing catastrophic failure of the capacitor itself. Failure of electrolytic capacitors can result in an explosion or fire, potentially causing damage to other components as well as injuries. Bipolar electrolytic capacitors which may be operated with either polarity are also made, using special constructions with two anodes connected in series. A bipolar electrolytic capacitor can also be made by connecting two normal electrolytic capacitors in series, anode to anode or cathode to cathode.

General information edit

Electrolytic capacitors family tree edit

As to the basic construction principles of electrolytic capacitors, there are three different types: aluminum, tantalum, and niobium capacitors. Each of these three capacitor families uses non-solid and solid manganese dioxide or solid polymer electrolytes, so a great spread of different combinations of anode material and solid or non-solid electrolytes is available.

 
Depending on the nature of the anode metal used and the electrolyte used, there is a wide variety of electrolytic capacitors

Charge principle edit

Like other conventional capacitors, electrolytic capacitors store the electric energy statically by charge separation in an electric field in the dielectric oxide layer between two electrodes. The non-solid or solid electrolyte in principle is the cathode, which thus forms the second electrode of the capacitor. This and the storage principle distinguish them from electrochemical capacitors or supercapacitors, in which the electrolyte generally is the ionic conductive connection between two electrodes and the storage occurs with statically double-layer capacitance and electrochemical pseudocapacitance.

Basic materials and construction edit

 
Basic principle of anodic oxidation (forming), in which, by applying a voltage with a current source, an oxide layer is formed on a metallic anode

Electrolytic capacitors use a chemical feature of some special metals, previously called "valve metals", which on contact with a particular electrolyte form a very thin insulating oxide layer on their surface by anodic oxidation which can function as a dielectric. There are three different anode metals in use for electrolytic capacitors:

  1. Aluminum electrolytic capacitors use a high-purity etched aluminium foil with aluminium oxide as dielectric
  2. Tantalum electrolytic capacitors use a sintered pellet (“slug”) of high-purity tantalum powder with tantalum pentoxide as dielectric
  3. Niobium electrolytic capacitors use a sintered "slug" of high-purity niobium or niobium oxide powder with niobium pentoxide as dielectric.

To increase their capacitance per unit volume, all anode materials are either etched or sintered and have a rough surface structure with a much higher surface area compared to a smooth surface of the same area or the same volume. By applying a positive voltage to the above-mentioned anode material in an electrolytic bath an oxide barrier layer with a thickness corresponding to the applied voltage will be formed (formation). This oxide layer acts as dielectric in an electrolytic capacitor. The properties of this oxide layers are given in the following table:

Characteristics of the different oxide layers in aluminum, tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors[1][2]
Anode-
material
Dielectric Oxide
structure
Relative
permittivity
Breakdown
voltage
(V/µm)
Electric
layer
thickness
(nm/V)
Aluminum Aluminium oxide Al2O3 amorphous 9.6 710 1.4
crystalline 11.6…14.2[3] 800...1000[4] 1.25...1.0
Tantalum Tantalum pentoxide Ta2O5 amorphous 27 625 1.6
Niobium or
Niobium oxide
Niobium pentoxide Nb2O5 amorphous 41 400 2.5

After forming a dielectric oxide on the rough anode structure, a counter electrode has to match the rough insulating oxide surface. This is accomplished by the electrolyte, which acts as the cathode electrode of an electrolytic capacitor. There are many different electrolytes in use. Generally they are distinguished into two species, “non-solid” and “solid” electrolytes. As a liquid medium which has ion conductivity caused by moving ions, non-solid electrolytes can easily fit the rough structures. Solid electrolytes which have electron conductivity can fit the rough structures with the help of special chemical processes like pyrolysis for manganese dioxide or polymerization for conducting polymers.

Comparing the permittivities of the different oxide materials it is seen that tantalum pentoxide has a permittivity approximately three times higher than aluminum oxide. Tantalum electrolytic capacitors of a given CV value theoretically are therefore smaller than aluminium electrolytic capacitors. In practice different safety margins to reach reliable components makes a comparison difficult.

The anodically generated insulating oxide layer is destroyed if the polarity of the applied voltage changes.

Capacitance and volumetric efficiency edit

 
A dielectric material is placed between two conducting plates (electrodes), each of area A and with separation d.

Electrolytic capacitors are based on the principle of a "plate capacitor" whose capacitance increases with larger electrode area A, higher dielectric permittivity ε, and thinness of dielectric (d).

 

The dielectric thickness of electrolytic capacitors is very small, in the range of nanometers per volt. On the other hand, the voltage strengths of these oxide layers are quite high. With this very thin dielectric oxide layer combined with a sufficiently high dielectric strength the electrolytic capacitors can achieve a high volumetric capacitance. This is one reason for the high capacitance values of electrolytic capacitors compared to conventional capacitors.

All etched or sintered anodes have a much higher surface area compared to a smooth surface of the same area or the same volume. That increases the capacitance value, depending on the rated voltage, by a factor of up to 200 for non-solid aluminium electrolytic capacitors as well as for solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors.[5][6][7] The large surface compared to a smooth one is the second reason for the relatively high capacitance values of electrolytic capacitors compared with other capacitor families.

Because the forming voltage defines the oxide layer thickness, the desired voltage rating can be produced very simply. Electrolytic capacitors have high volumetric efficiency, the so-called "CV product", defined as the product of capacitance and voltage divided by volume.

Basic construction of non-solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors edit

Basic construction of solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors edit

Types and features of electrolytic capacitors edit

Comparison of electrolytic capacitor types edit

Combinations of anode materials for electrolytic capacitors and the electrolytes used have given rise to wide varieties of capacitor types with different properties. An outline of the main characteristics of the different types is shown in the table below.

Overview of the key features of the different types of electrolytic capacitor
Electrolytic
capacitor family
Electrolyte Capacitance
range
(µF)
Max.
rated voltage
(V)
Max.
temperature
(°C)
Aluminium-
electrolytic capacitor
etched foils
Non-solid, organic electrolyte,
e.g. GBL, DMF, DMA,
0.1:1,000,000 550 105/125/150
Non-solid, e.g. borax, glycol 0.1:2,700,000 630 85/105
Non-solid, water based 1:18,000 100 85/105
Solid, polymer 10:1,500 25 105
Hybrid, polymer and non-solid 6.8:1,000 125 105/125
Tantalum
electrolytic capacitor,
sintered anode
Non-solid, sulfuric acid 0.1:18,000 630 125/200
Solid, manganese dioxide 0.1:3,300 125 125/150
Solid, polymer 10:1,500 25 105
Niobium oxide-
electrolytic capacitor
sintered anode
Solid, manganese dioxide 1:1,500 10 105
Solid, polymer 4.7:470 16 105

The non-solid or so-called "wet" aluminum electrolytic capacitors were and are the cheapest among all other conventional capacitors. They not only provide the cheapest solutions for high capacitance or voltage values for decoupling and buffering purposes but are also insensitive to low ohmic charging and discharging as well as to low-energy transients. Non-solid electrolytic capacitors can be found in nearly all areas of electronic devices, with the exception of military applications.

Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte as surface-mountable chip capacitors are mainly used in electronic devices in which little space is available or a low profile is required. They operate reliably over a wide temperature range without large parameter deviations. In military and space applications only tantalum electrolytic capacitors have the necessary approvals.

Niobium electrolytic capacitors are in direct competition with industrial tantalum electrolytic capacitors because niobium is more readily available. Their properties are comparable.

The electrical properties of aluminium, tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors have been greatly improved by the polymer electrolyte.

Comparison of electrical parameters edit

In order to compare the different characteristics of the different electrolytic capacitor types, capacitors with the same dimensions and of similar capacitance and voltage are compared in the following table. In such a comparison the values for ESR and ripple current load are the most important parameters for the use of electrolytic capacitors in modern electronic equipment. The lower the ESR, the higher the ripple current per volume and better functionality of the capacitor in the circuit. However, better electrical parameters come with higher prices.

Comparison of the most important characteristics of different types of electrolytic capacitors
Electrolytic
capacitor family
Type 1) Dimension
DxL, WxHxL
(mm)
Max. ESR
100 kHz, 20 °C
(mΩ)
Max. ripple current
85/105 °C
(mA)
Max. leakage current
after 2 min. 2)
(µA)
"wet" Al-electrolytic capacitors 1976 3)
Ethylene glycol/borax electrolyte
Valvo, 034,
4.7/40
5x11 15.000 17 10 (0.01CV)
"wet" Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Organic electrolyte
Vishay, 036 RSP,
100/10
5x11 1000 160 10 (0.01CV)
"wet" Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Ethylene glycol/borax electrolyte
NCC, SMQ,
100/10
5x11 900 180 10 (0.01CV)
"wet" Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Water-based electrolyte
Rubycon, ZL,
100/10
5x11 300 250 10 (0.01CV)
"wet" Al-electrolytic capacitors, SMD
Ethylene glycol/borax electrolyte
NIC, NACY,
220/10
6.3x8 300 300 10 (0.01CV)
"wet" Al-electrolytic capacitors, SMD
Water-based electrolyte
NIC, NAZJ,
220/16
6.3x8 160 600 10 (0.01CV)
Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors
MnO2 electrolyte
Kemet, T494,
330/10
7,3x4.3x4.0 100 1285 10 (0.01CV)
Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors
Multianode, MnO2 electrolyte
Kemet, T510,
330/10
7.3x4.3x4.0 35 2500 10 (0.01CV)
Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors
Polymer electrolyte
Kemet, T543,
330/10
7.3x4.3x4,0 10 4900 100 (0.1CV)
Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors
Multianode, polymer
Kemet, T530,
150/10
7.3x4.3x4.0 5 4970 100 (0.1CV)
Solid niobium electrolytic capacitors,
MnO2 electrolyte
AVX, NOS,
220/6,3
7.3x4.3x4.1 80 1461 20 (0.02CV)
Solid niobium electrolytic capacitors,
Multianode, MnO2 electrolyte
AVX, NBM,
220/6.3
7.3x4.3x4.1 40 2561 20 (0.02CV)
Solid Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Polymer electrolyte
Panasonic, SP-UE,
180/6.3
7.3x4.3x4.2 7 3700 100 (0.1CV)
Solid Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Polymer electrolyte
Kemet, A700,
100/10
7.3x4.3x4.0 10 4700 40 (0.04CV)
Solid Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Polymer electrolyte
Panansonic, SVP,
120/6.3
6.3x6 17 2780 200 (0.2CV)
Hybrid Al-electrolytic capacitors,
Polymer + non-solid electrolyte
Panasonic, ZA,
100/25
6.3x7.7 30 2000 10 (0.01CV)

1) Manufacturer, series name, capacitance/voltage

2) calculated for a capacitor 100 µF/10 V,

3) from a 1976 data sheet

Styles of aluminium and tantalum electrolytic capacitors edit

Aluminium electrolytic capacitors form the bulk of the electrolytic capacitors used in electronics because of the large diversity of sizes and the inexpensive production. Tantalum electrolytic capacitors, usually used in the SMD version, have a higher specific capacitance than the aluminum electrolytic capacitors and are used in devices with limited space or flat design such as laptops. They are also used in military technology, mostly in axial style, hermetically sealed. Niobium electrolytic chip capacitors are a new development in the market and are intended as a replacement for tantalum electrolytic chip capacitors.

History edit

 
Early small electrolytic capacitor from 1914. It had a capacitance of around 2 microfarads.
 
View of the anode of a "wet" aluminum electrolytic capacitor, Bell System Technique 1929

Origin edit

The phenomenon that in an electrochemical process, aluminum and such metals as tantalum, niobium, manganese, titanium, zinc, cadmium, etc., can form an oxide layer which blocks an electric current from flowing in one direction but which allows current to flow in the opposite direction, was first observed in 1857 by the German physicist and chemist Johann Heinrich Buff (1805–1878).[8] It was first put to use in 1875 by the French researcher and founder Eugène Ducretet,[9] who coined the term "valve metal" for such metals.

Charles Pollak (born Karol Pollak), a producer of accumulators, found out that the oxide layer on an aluminum anode remained stable in a neutral or alkaline electrolyte, even when the power was switched off. In 1896 he filed a patent for an "Electric liquid capacitor with aluminum electrodes" (de: Elektrischer Flüssigkeitskondensator mit Aluminiumelektroden) based on his idea of using the oxide layer in a polarized capacitor in combination with a neutral or slightly alkaline electrolyte.[10][11]

"Wet" aluminum capacitor edit

 
Various forms of historical anode structures for wet capacitors. For all of these anodes the outer metallic container served as the cathode

The first industrially realized electrolytic capacitors consisted of a metallic box used as the cathode. It was filled with a borax electrolyte dissolved in water, in which a folded aluminum anode plate was inserted. Applying a DC voltage from outside, an oxide layer was formed on the surface of the anode. The advantage of these capacitors was that they were significantly smaller and cheaper than all other capacitors at this time relative to the realized capacitance value. This construction with different styles of anode construction but with a case as cathode and container for the electrolyte was used up to the 1930s and was called a "wet" electrolytic capacitor, in the sense of its having a high water content.

The first more common application of wet aluminum electrolytic capacitors was in large telephone exchanges, to reduce relay hash (noise) on the 48 volt DC power supply. The development of AC-operated domestic radio receivers in the late 1920s created a demand for large-capacitance (for the time) and high-voltage capacitors for the valve amplifier technique, typically at least 4 microfarads and rated at around 500 volts DC. Waxed paper and oiled silk film capacitors were available, but devices with that order of capacitance and voltage rating were bulky and prohibitively expensive.

"Dry" aluminum capacitor edit

 
A "dry" electrolytic capacitor with 100 µF and 150 V

The ancestor of the modern electrolytic capacitor was patented by Samuel Ruben in 1925,[12][13] who teamed with Philip Mallory, the founder of the battery company that is now known as Duracell International. Ruben's idea adopted the stacked construction of a silver mica capacitor. He introduced a separated second foil to contact the electrolyte adjacent to the anode foil instead of using the electrolyte-filled container as the capacitor's cathode. The stacked second foil got its own terminal additional to the anode terminal and the container no longer had an electrical function. This type of electrolytic capacitor combined with a liquid or gel-like electrolyte of a non-aqueous nature, which is therefore dry in the sense of having a very low water content, became known as the "dry" type of electrolytic capacitor.[14]

With Ruben's invention, together with the invention of wound foils separated with a paper spacer 1927 by A. Eckel of Hydra-Werke (Germany),[15] the actual development of electrolytic capacitors began.[14]

William Dubilier, whose first patent for electrolytic capacitors was filed in 1928,[16] industrialized the new ideas for electrolytic capacitors and started the first large commercial production in 1931 in the Cornell-Dubilier (CD) factory in Plainfield, New Jersey.[14] At the same time in Berlin, Germany, the "Hydra-Werke", an AEG company, started the production of electrolytic capacitors in large quantities. Another manufacturer, Ralph D. Mershon, had success in servicing the radio-market demand for electrolytic capacitors.[17]

 
Miniaturization of aluminum electrolytic capacitors from 1960 to 2005 in case 10x16mm up to factor ten

In his 1896 patent Pollak already recognized that the capacitance of the capacitor increases when roughening the surface of the anode foil. Today (2014), electrochemically etched low voltage foils can achieve an up to 200-fold increase in surface area compared to a smooth surface.[5][6] Advances in the etching process are the reason for the dimension reductions in aluminum electrolytic capacitors over recent decades.

For aluminum electrolytic capacitors the decades from 1970 to 1990 were marked by the development of various new professional series specifically suited to certain industrial applications, for example with very low leakage currents or with long life characteristics, or for higher temperatures up to 125 °C.[18][19]

Tantalum capacitors edit

One of the first tantalum electrolytic capacitors were developed in 1930 by Tansitor Electronic Inc. USA, for military purposes.[20] The basic construction of a wound cell was adopted and a tantalum anode foil was used together with a tantalum cathode foil, separated with a paper spacer impregnated with a liquid electrolyte, mostly sulfuric acid, and encapsulated in a silver case.

The relevant development of solid electrolyte tantalum capacitors began some years after William Shockley, John Bardeen and Walter Houser Brattain invented the transistor in 1947. It was invented by Bell Laboratories in the early 1950s as a miniaturized, more reliable low-voltage support capacitor to complement their newly invented transistor. The solution found by R. L. Taylor and H. E. Haring at Bell Labs in early 1950 was based on experience with ceramics. They ground tantalum to a powder, which they pressed into a cylindrical form and then sintered at a high temperature between 1500 and 2000 °C under vacuum conditions, to produce a pellet ("slug").[21][22]

These first sintered tantalum capacitors used a non-solid electrolyte, which does not fit the concept of solid electronics. In 1952 a targeted search at Bell Labs by D. A. McLean and F. S. Power for a solid electrolyte led to the invention of manganese dioxide as a solid electrolyte for a sintered tantalum capacitor.[23]

Although fundamental inventions came from Bell Labs, the inventions for manufacturing commercially viable tantalum electrolytic capacitors came from researchers at the Sprague Electric Company. Preston Robinson, Sprague's Director of Research, is considered to be the actual inventor of tantalum capacitors in 1954.[24][25] His invention was supported by R. J. Millard, who introduced the "reform" step in 1955,[26][27] a significant improvement in which the dielectric of the capacitor was repaired after each dip-and-convert cycle of MnO2 deposition, which dramatically reduced the leakage current of the finished capacitors.

Although solid tantalum capacitors offered capacitors with lower ESR and leakage current values than the aluminum electrolytic capacitors, a 1980 price shock for tantalum dramatically reduced the applications of tantalum electrolytic capacitors, especially in the entertainment industry.[28][29] The industry switched back to using aluminum electrolytic capacitors.

Solid electrolytes edit

 
Conductivity of non-solid and solid electrolytes

The first solid electrolyte of manganese dioxide developed 1952 for tantalum capacitors had a conductivity 10 times better than all other types of non-solid electrolytes. It also influenced the development of aluminum electrolytic capacitors. In 1964 the first aluminum electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte SAL electrolytic capacitor came on the market, developed by Philips.[30]

With the beginning of digitalization, Intel launched its first microcomputer, the MCS 4, in 1971. In 1972 Hewlett Packard launched one of the first pocket calculators, the HP 35.[31][32] The requirements for capacitors increased in terms of lowering the equivalent series resistance (ESR) for bypass and decoupling capacitors.[33]

It was not until 1983 when a new step toward ESR reduction was taken by Sanyo with its "OS-CON" aluminum electrolytic capacitors. These capacitors used a solid organic conductor, the charge transfer salt TTF-TCNQ (tetracyanoquinodimethane), which provided an improvement in conductivity by a factor of 10 compared with the manganese dioxide electrolyte.[34][35][36]

The next step in ESR reduction was the development of conducting polymers by Alan J. Heeger, Alan MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa in 1975.[37] The conductivity of conductive polymers such as polypyrrole (PPy) [38] or PEDOT[39] is better than that of TCNQ by a factor of 100 to 500, and close to the conductivity of metals.

In 1991 Panasonic released its "SP-Cap",[40] series of polymer aluminum electrolytic capacitors. These aluminum electrolytic capacitors with polymer electrolytes reached very low ESR values directly comparable to ceramic multilayer capacitors (MLCCs). They were still less expensive than tantalum capacitors and with their flat design for laptops and cell phones competed with tantalum chip capacitors as well.

Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with PPy polymer electrolyte cathode followed three years later. In 1993 NEC introduced its SMD polymer tantalum electrolytic capacitors, called "NeoCap". In 1997 Sanyo followed with the "POSCAP" polymer tantalum chips.

A new conductive polymer for tantalum polymer capacitors was presented by Kemet at the "1999 Carts" conference.[41] This capacitor used the newly developed organic conductive polymer PEDT Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene), also known as PEDOT (trade name Baytron®) [42]

Niobium capacitors edit

Another price explosion for tantalum in 2000/2001 forced the development of niobium electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte, which have been available since 2002.[43][44] Niobium is a sister metal to tantalum and serves as valve metal generating an oxide layer during anodic oxidation. Niobium as raw material is much more abundant in nature than tantalum and is less expensive. It was a question of the availability of the base metal in the late 1960s which led to development and implementation of niobium electrolytic capacitors in the former Soviet Union instead of tantalum capacitors as in the West. The materials and processes used to produce niobium-dielectric capacitors are essentially the same as for existing tantalum-dielectric capacitors. The characteristics of niobium electrolytic capacitors and tantalum electrolytic capacitors are roughly comparable.[45]

Water-based electrolytes edit

With the goal of reducing ESR for inexpensive non-solid electrolytic capacitors from the mid-1980s in Japan, new water-based electrolytes for aluminum electrolytic capacitors were developed. Water is inexpensive, an effective solvent for electrolytes, and significantly improves the conductivity of the electrolyte. The Japanese manufacturer Rubycon was a leader in the development of new water-based electrolyte systems with enhanced conductivity in the late 1990s.[46] The new series of non-solid electrolytic capacitors with water-based electrolyte was described in the data sheets as having "low ESR", "low impedance", "ultra-low impedance" or "high ripple current".

From 1999 through at least 2010, a stolen recipe for such a water-based electrolyte, in which important stabilizers[47][48] were absent,[49] led to the widespread problem of "bad caps" (failing electrolytic capacitors), leaking or occasionally bursting in computers, power supplies, and other electronic equipment, which became known as the "capacitor plague". In these electrolytic capacitors the water reacts quite aggressively with aluminum, accompanied by strong heat and gas development in the capacitor, resulting in premature equipment failure, and development of a cottage repair industry.

Electrical characteristics edit

Series-equivalent circuit edit

 
Series-equivalent circuit model of an electrolytic capacitor

The electrical characteristics of capacitors are harmonized by the international generic specification IEC 60384-1. In this standard, the electrical characteristics of capacitors are described by an idealized series-equivalent circuit with electrical components which model all ohmic losses, capacitive and inductive parameters of an electrolytic capacitor:

Capacitance, standard values and tolerances edit

 
Typical capacitance as a function of frequency
 
Typical capacitance as a function of temperature

The electrical characteristics of electrolytic capacitors depend on the structure of the anode and the electrolyte used. This influences the capacitance value of electrolytic capacitors, which depends on measuring frequency and temperature. Electrolytic capacitors with non-solid electrolytes show a broader aberration over frequency and temperature ranges than do capacitors with solid electrolytes.

The basic unit of an electrolytic capacitor's capacitance is the microfarad (μF). The capacitance value specified in the data sheets of the manufacturers is called the rated capacitance CR or nominal capacitance CN and is the value for which the capacitor has been designed.

The standardized measuring condition for electrolytic capacitors is an AC measuring method with 0.5 V at a frequency of 100/120 Hz at a temperature of 20 °C. For tantalum capacitors a DC bias voltage of 1.1 to 1.5  V for types with a rated voltage ≤2.5 V, or 2.1 to 2.5 V for types with a rated voltage of >2.5 V, may be applied during the measurement to avoid reverse voltage.

The capacitance value measured at the frequency of 1 kHz is about 10% less than the 100/120 Hz value. Therefore, the capacitance values of electrolytic capacitors are not directly comparable and differ from those of film capacitors or ceramic capacitors, whose capacitance is measured at 1 kHz or higher.

Measured with an AC measuring method at 100/120 Hz the capacitance value is the closest value to the electrical charge stored in the e-caps. The stored charge is measured with a special discharge method and is called the DC capacitance. The DC capacitance is about 10% higher than the 100/120 Hz AC capacitance. The DC capacitance is of interest for discharge applications like photoflash.

The percentage of allowed deviation of the measured capacitance from the rated value is called the capacitance tolerance. Electrolytic capacitors are available in different tolerance series, whose values are specified in the E series specified in IEC 60063. For abbreviated marking in tight spaces, a letter code for each tolerance is specified in IEC 60062.

  • rated capacitance, series E3, tolerance ±20%, letter code "M"
  • rated capacitance, series E6, tolerance ±20%, letter code "M"
  • rated capacitance, series E12, tolerance ±10%, letter code "K"

The required capacitance tolerance is determined by the particular application. Electrolytic capacitors, which are often used for filtering and bypassing, do not have the need for narrow tolerances because they are mostly not used for accurate frequency applications like in oscillators.

Rated and category voltage edit

 
Relation between rated and category voltage and rated and category temperature

Referring to the IEC/EN 60384-1 standard, the allowed operating voltage for electrolytic capacitors is called the "rated voltage UR" or "nominal voltage UN". The rated voltage UR is the maximum DC voltage or peak pulse voltage that may be applied continuously at any temperature within the rated temperature range TR.

The voltage proof of electrolytic capacitors decreases with increasing temperature. For some applications it is important to use a higher temperature range. Lowering the voltage applied at a higher temperature maintains safety margins. For some capacitor types therefore the IEC standard specifies a "temperature derated voltage" for a higher temperature, the "category voltage UC". The category voltage is the maximum DC voltage or peak pulse voltage that may be applied continuously to a capacitor at any temperature within the category temperature range TC. The relation between both voltages and temperatures is given in the picture at right.

Applying a higher voltage than specified may destroy electrolytic capacitors.

Applying a lower voltage may have a positive influence on electrolytic capacitors. For aluminum electrolytic capacitors a lower applied voltage can in some cases extend the lifetime.[5] For tantalum electrolytic capacitors lowering the voltage applied increases the reliability and reduces the expected failure rate.[50] I

Surge voltage edit

The surge voltage indicates the maximum peak voltage value that may be applied to electrolytic capacitors during their application for a limited number of cycles.[5] The surge voltage is standardized in IEC/EN 60384-1. For aluminum electrolytic capacitors with a rated voltage of up to 315 V, the surge voltage is 1.15 times the rated voltage, and for capacitors with a rated voltage exceeding 315 V, the surge voltage is 1.10 times the rated voltage.

For tantalum electrolytic capacitors the surge voltage can be 1.3 times the rated voltage, rounded off to the nearest volt. The surge voltage applied to tantalum capacitors may influence the capacitor's failure rate.[51][52]

Transient voltage edit

Aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non-solid electrolyte are relatively insensitive to high and short-term transient voltages higher than surge voltage, if the frequency and the energy content of the transients are low. This ability depends on rated voltage and component size. Low energy transient voltages lead to a voltage limitation similar to a zener diode.[53] An unambiguous and general specification of tolerable transients or peak voltages is not possible. In every case transients arise, the application has to be approved very carefully.

Electrolytic capacitors with solid manganese oxide or polymer electrolyte, and aluminum as well as tantalum electrolytic capacitors cannot withstand transients or peak voltages higher than the surge voltage. Transients may destroy this type of electrolytic capacitor.[51][52]

Reverse voltage edit

 
An exploded aluminum electrolytic capacitor on a PCB
 
An electrolytic capacitor that has exploded via the vent port on the top, showing the internal dielectric material that was forced out.

Standard electrolytic capacitors, and aluminum as well as tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors are polarized and generally require the anode electrode voltage to be positive relative to the cathode voltage.

Nevertheless, electrolytic capacitors can withstand for short instants a reverse voltage for a limited number of cycles. Specifically, aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non-solid electrolyte can withstand a reverse voltage of about 1 V to 1.5 V. This reverse voltage should never be used to determine the maximum reverse voltage under which a capacitor can be used permanently.[54][55][56]

Solid tantalum capacitors can also withstand reverse voltages for short periods. The most common guidelines for tantalum reverse voltage are:

  • 10 % of rated voltage to a maximum of 1 V at 25 °C,
  • 3 % of rated voltage to a maximum of 0.5 V at 85 °C,
  • 1 % of rated voltage to a maximum of 0.1 V at 125 °C.

These guidelines apply for short excursion and should never be used to determine the maximum reverse voltage under which a capacitor can be used permanently.[57][58]

But in no case, for aluminum as well as for tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors, may a reverse voltage be used for a permanent AC application.

To minimize the likelihood of a polarized electrolytic being incorrectly inserted into a circuit, polarity has to be very clearly indicated on the case, see the section on polarity marking below.

Special bipolar aluminum electrolytic capacitors designed for bipolar operation are available, and usually referred to as "non-polarized" or "bipolar" types. In these, the capacitors have two anode foils with full-thickness oxide layers connected in reverse polarity. On the alternate halves of the AC cycles, one of the oxides on the foil acts as a blocking dielectric, preventing reverse current from damaging the electrolyte of the other one. But these bipolar electrolytic capacitors are not suitable for main AC applications instead of power capacitors with metallized polymer film or paper dielectric.

Impedance edit

 
Simplified series-equivalent circuit of a capacitor for higher frequencies (above); vector diagram with electrical reactances XESL and XC and resistance ESR and for illustration the impedance Z and dissipation factor tan δ

In general, a capacitor is seen as a storage component for electric energy. But this is only one capacitor application. A capacitor can also act as an AC resistor. Aluminum electrolytic capacitors in particular are often used as decoupling capacitors to filter or bypass undesired AC frequencies to ground or for capacitive coupling of audio AC signals. Then the dielectric is used only for blocking DC. For such applications, the impedance (AC resistance) is as important as the capacitance value.

 
Typical impedance curves for different capacitance values over frequency. The higher the capacitance, the lower the resonant frequency.

The impedance Z is the vector sum of reactance and resistance; it describes the phase difference and the ratio of amplitudes between sinusoidally varying voltage and sinusoidally varying current at a given frequency. In this sense impedance is a measure of the ability of the capacitor to pass alternating currents and can be used like Ohm's law.

 

In other words, impedance is a frequency-dependent AC resistance and possesses both magnitude and phase at a particular frequency.

In data sheets of electrolytic capacitors only the impedance magnitude |Z| is specified, and simply written as "Z". Regarding the IEC/EN 60384-1 standard, the impedance values of electrolytic capacitors are measured and specified at 10 kHz or 100 kHz depending on the capacitance and voltage of the capacitor.

Besides measuring, the impedance can be calculated using the idealized components of a capacitor's series-equivalent circuit, including an ideal capacitor C, a resistor ESR, and an inductance ESL. In this case the impedance at the angular frequency ω is given by the geometric (complex) addition of ESR, by a capacitive reactance XC

 

and by an inductive reactance XL (Inductance)

 .

Then Z is given by

 .

In the special case of resonance, in which the both reactive resistances XC and XL have the same value (XC=XL), then the impedance will only be determined by ESR. With frequencies above the resonance frequency, the impedance increases again because of the ESL of the capacitor. The capacitor becomes an inductor.

ESR and dissipation factor tan δ edit

The equivalent series resistance (ESR) summarizes all resistive losses of the capacitor. These are the terminal resistances, the contact resistance of the electrode contact, the line resistance of the electrodes, the electrolyte resistance, and the dielectric losses in the dielectric oxide layer.[59]

For electrolytic capacitors, ESR generally decreases with increasing frequency and temperature.[60]

ESR influences the superimposed AC ripple after smoothing and may influence the circuit functionality. Within the capacitor, ESR accounts for internal heat generation if a ripple current flows across the capacitor. This internal heat reduces the lifetime of non-solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors and affects the reliability of solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors.

For electrolytic capacitors, for historical reasons the dissipation factor tan δ will sometimes be specified in the data sheet instead of the ESR. The dissipation factor is determined by the tangent of the phase angle between the capacitive reactance XC minus the inductive reactance XL and the ESR. If the inductance ESL is small, the dissipation factor can be approximated as:

 

The dissipation factor is used for capacitors with very low losses in frequency-determining circuits where the reciprocal value of the dissipation factor is called the quality factor (Q), which represents a resonator's bandwidth.

Ripple current edit

 
The high ripple current across the smoothing capacitor C1 in a power supply with half-wave rectification causes significant internal heat generation corresponding to the capacitor's ESR

"Ripple current" is the RMS value of a superimposed AC current of any frequency and any waveform of the current curve for continuous operation within the specified temperature range. It arises mainly in power supplies (including switched-mode power supplies) after rectifying an AC voltage and flows as charge and discharge current through any decoupling and smoothing capacitors.

Ripple currents generate heat inside the capacitor body. This dissipation power loss PL is caused by ESR and is the squared value of the effective (RMS) ripple current IR.

 

This internally generated heat, additional to the ambient temperature and possibly other external heat sources, leads to a capacitor body temperature having a temperature difference of Δ T relative to ambient. This heat has to be distributed as thermal losses Pth over the capacitor's surface A and the thermal resistance β to ambient.

 

The internally generated heat has to be distributed to ambient by thermal radiation, convection, and thermal conduction. The temperature of the capacitor, which is the net difference between heat produced and heat dissipated, must not exceed the capacitor's maximum specified temperature.

The ripple current is specified as an effective (RMS) value at 100 or 120 Hz or at 10 kHz at upper category temperature. Non-sinusoidal ripple currents have to be analyzed and separated into their single sinusoidal frequencies by means of Fourier analysis and summarized by squared addition the single currents.[61]

 

In non-solid electrolytic capacitors the heat generated by the ripple current causes the evaporation of electrolytes, shortening the lifetime of the capacitors.[62][63][64][65][66] Exceeding the limit tends to result in explosive failure.

In solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte the heat generated by the ripple current affects the reliability of the capacitors.[67][68][69][70] Exceeding the limit tends to result in catastrophic failure, failing short-circuit, with visible burning.

The heat generated by the ripple current also affects the lifetime of aluminum and tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid polymer electrolytes.[71] Exceeding the limit tends to result in catastrophic failure, failing short-circuit.

Current surge, peak or pulse current edit

Aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non-solid electrolytes normally can be charged up to the rated voltage without any current surge, peak or pulse limitation. This property is a result of the limited ion movability in the liquid electrolyte, which slows down the voltage ramp across the dielectric, and of the capacitor's ESR. Only the frequency of peaks integrated over time must not exceed the maximal specified ripple current.

Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte or polymer electrolyte are damaged by peak or pulse currents.[51][52] Solid Tantalum capacitors which are exposed to surge, peak or pulse currents, for example, in highly inductive circuits, should be used with a voltage derating. If possible, the voltage profile should be a ramp turn-on, as this reduces the peak current experienced by the capacitor.

Leakage current edit

 
general leakage behavior of electrolytic capacitors: leakage current   as a function of time   for different kinds of electrolytes
  non solid, high water content
  non solid, organic
  solid, polymer

For electrolytic capacitors, DC leakage current (DCL) is a special characteristic that other conventional capacitors do not have. This current is represented by the resistor Rleak in parallel with the capacitor in the series-equivalent circuit of electrolytic capacitors.

The reasons for leakage current are different between electrolytic capacitors with non-solid and with solid electrolyte or more common for "wet" aluminum and for "solid" tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte as well as for electrolytic capacitors with polymer electrolytes. For non-solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors the leakage current includes all weakened imperfections of the dielectric caused by unwanted chemical processes taking place during the time without applied voltage (storage time) between operating cycles. These unwanted chemical processes depend on the kind of electrolyte. Water-based electrolytes are more aggressive to the aluminum oxide layer than are electrolytes based on organic liquids. This is why different electrolytic capacitor series specify different storage time without reforming.[72]

Applying a positive voltage to a "wet" capacitor causes a reforming (self-healing) process which repairs all weakened dielectric layers, and the leakage current remain at a low level.[73]

Although the leakage current of non-solid electrolytic capacitors is higher than current flow across the dielectric in ceramic or film capacitors, self-discharge of modern non-solid electrolytic capacitors with organic electrolytes takes several weeks.

The main causes of DCL for solid tantalum capacitors include electrical breakdown of the dielectric; conductive paths due to impurities or poor anodization; and bypassing of dielectric due to excess manganese dioxide, to moisture paths, or to cathode conductors (carbon, silver).[74] This "normal" leakage current in solid electrolyte capacitors cannot be reduced by "healing", because under normal conditions solid electrolytes cannot provide oxygen for forming processes. This statement should not be confused with the self-healing process during field crystallization, see below, Reliability (Failure rate).

The specification of the leakage current in data sheets is often given as multiplication of the rated capacitance value CR with the value of the rated voltage UR together with an addendum figure, measured after a measuring time of two or five minutes, for example:

 

The leakage current value depends on the voltage applied, on the temperature of the capacitor, and on measuring time. Leakage current in solid MnO2 tantalum electrolytic capacitors generally drops very much faster than for non-solid electrolytic capacitors but remain at the level reached.

Dielectric absorption (soakage) edit

Dielectric absorption occurs when a capacitor that has remained charged for a long time discharges only incompletely when briefly discharged. Although an ideal capacitor would reach zero volts after discharge, real capacitors develop a small voltage from time-delayed dipole discharging, a phenomenon that is also called dielectric relaxation, "soakage" or "battery action".

Values of dielectric absorption for some often used capacitors
Type of capacitor Dielectric absorption
Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte 2 to 3%,[75] 10%[76]
Aluminium electrolytic capacitor with non solid electrolyte 10 to 15%[77]

Dielectric absorption may be a problem in circuits where very small currents are used in the function of an electronic circuit, such as long-time-constant integrators or sample-and-hold circuits.[78] In most electrolytic capacitor applications supporting power supply lines, dielectric absorption is not a problem.

But especially for electrolytic capacitors with high rated voltage, the voltage at the terminals generated by the dielectric absorption can pose a safety risk to personnel or circuits. In order to prevent shocks, most very large capacitors are shipped with shorting wires that need to be removed before the capacitors are used.[79]

Operational characteristics edit

Reliability (failure rate) edit

 
Bathtub curve with times of “early failures”, “random failures”, and wear-out failures”. The time of random failures is the time of constant failure rate and corresponds with the lifetime of non-solid e-caps.

The reliability of a component is a property that indicates how reliably this component performs its function in a time interval. It is subject to a stochastic process and can be described qualitatively and quantitatively; it is not directly measurable. The reliability of electrolytic capacitors is empirically determined by identifying the failure rate in production accompanying endurance tests, see Reliability engineering.

Reliability normally is shown as a bathtub curve and is divided into three areas: early failures or infant mortality failures, constant random failures and wear out failures. Failures totalized in a failure rate are short circuit, open circuit, and degradation failures (exceeding electrical parameters).

The reliability prediction is generally expressed in a failure rate λ, abbreviated FIT (Failures In Time). This is the number of failures that can be expected in one billion (109) component-hours of operation (e.g., 1000 components for 1 million hours, or 1  million components for 1000 hours which is 1 ppm/1000 hours) at fixed working conditions during the period of constant random failures. This failure rate model implicitly assumes the idea of "random failure". Individual components fail at random times but at a predictable rate.

Billions of tested capacitor unit-hours would be needed to establish failure rates in the very low level range which are required today to ensure the production of large quantities of components without failures. This requires about a million units over a long time period, which means a large staff and considerable financing.[80] The tested failure rates are often complemented with figures resulting from feedback from the field from major customers (field failure rate), which mostly results in a lower failure rate than tested.

The reciprocal value of FIT is Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF).

The standard operating conditions for FIT testing are 40 °C and 0.5 UR. For other conditions of applied voltage, current load, temperature, capacitance value, circuit resistance (for tantalum capacitors), mechanical influences and humidity, the FIT figure can be converted with acceleration factors standardized for industrial[81] or military[82] applications. The higher the temperature and applied voltage, the higher the failure rate, for example.

The most often cited source for failure rate conversion is MIL-HDBK-217F, the “bible” of failure rate calculations for electronic components. SQC Online, the online statistical calculator for acceptance sampling and quality control, provides an online tool for short examination to calculate given failure rate values for given application conditions.[83]

Some manufacturers may have their own FIT calculation tables for tantalum capacitors.[84][85] or for aluminum capacitors[86]

For tantalum capacitors the failure rate is often specified at 85 °C and rated voltage UR as reference conditions and expressed as percent failed components per thousand hours (n %/1000 h). That is, “n” number of failed components per 105 hours, or in FIT the ten-thousand-fold value per 109 hours.

Tantalum capacitors are now very reliable components. Continuous improvement in tantalum powder and capacitor technologies have resulted in a significant reduction in the amount of impurities which formerly caused most field crystallization failures. Commercially available industrially produced tantalum capacitors now have reached as standard products the high MIL standard "C" level, which is 0.01%/1000 h at 85 °C and UR or 1 failure per 107 hours at 85 °C and UR.[87] Converted to FIT with the acceleration factors coming from MIL HDKB 217F at 40 °C and 0.5 , UR is the failure rate. For a 100 µF/25 V tantalum chip capacitor used with a series resistance of 0.1 Ω the failure rate is 0.02 FIT.

Aluminum electrolytic capacitors do not use a specification in "% per 1000 h at 85 °C and UR". They use the FIT specification with 40 °C and 0.5 UR as reference conditions. Aluminum electrolytic capacitors are very reliable components. Published figures show for low voltage types (6.3…160 V) FIT rates in the range of 1 to 20 FIT[88] and for high voltage types (>160 …550 V) FIT rates in the range of 20 to 200 FIT.[86] Field failure rates for aluminum e-caps are in the range of 0.5 to 20 FIT.[86][88][89]

The published figures show that both tantalum and aluminum capacitor types are reliable components, comparable with other electronic components and achieving safe operation for decades under normal conditions. But a great difference exists in the case of wear-out failures. Electrolytic capacitors with non-solid electrolyte, have a limited period of constant random failures up to the point when wear-out failures begin. The constant random failure rate period corresponds to the lifetime or service life of “wet” aluminum electrolytic capacitors.

Lifetime edit

 
The electrical values of aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non-solid electrolyte change over time because the electrolyte evaporates. Reaching the specified limits of the electrical parameters, the period of the constant failure rate ends, signifying the end of the capacitor's lifetime. The graph shows this behavior in a 2000 h endurance test at 105 °C.

The lifetime, service life, load life or useful life of electrolytic capacitors is a special characteristic of non-solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors, whose liquid electrolyte can evaporate over time. Lowering the electrolyte level affects the electrical parameters of the capacitors. The capacitance decreases and the impedance and ESR increase with decreasing amounts of electrolyte. This very slow electrolyte drying-out depends on the temperature, the applied ripple current load, and the applied voltage. The lower these parameters compared to their maximum values, the longer the capacitor's “life”. The “end of life” point is defined by the appearance of wear-out failures or degradation failures when either capacitance, impedance, ESR or leakage current exceed their specified change limits.

The lifetime is a specification of a collection of tested capacitors and delivers an expectation of the behavior of similar types. This lifetime definition corresponds to the time of the constant random failure rate in the bathtub curve.

But even after exceeding the specified limits and the capacitors having reached their “end of life”, the electronic circuit is not in immediate danger; only the functionality of the capacitors is reduced. With today's high levels of purity in the manufacture of electrolytic capacitors it is not to be expected that short circuits occur after the end-of-life-point with progressive evaporation combined with parameter degradation.

The lifetime of non-solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors is specified in terms of “hours per temperature", like "2,000h/105 °C". With this specification the lifetime at operational conditions can be estimated by special formulas or graphs specified in the data sheets of serious manufacturers. They use different ways for specification, some give special formulas,[90][91] others specify their e-caps lifetime calculation with graphs that consider the influence of applied voltage.[88][92][93][94] The basic principle for calculating the time under operational conditions is the so-called “10-degree-rule”.[95][96][97]

This rule is also known as the Arrhenius rule. It characterizes the change of thermic reaction speed. For every 10 °C lower temperature the evaporation is reduced by half. That means for every 10 °C reduction in temperature, the lifetime of capacitors doubles. If a lifetime specification of an electrolytic capacitor is, for example, 2000  h/105 °C, the capacitor's lifetime at 45 °C can be ”calculated” as 128,000 hours—that is roughly 15 years—by using the 10-degrees-rule.

However, solid polymer electrolytic capacitors, and aluminum, tantalum, and niobium electrolytic capacitors also have a lifetime specification. The polymer electrolyte exhibits a small deterioration of conductivity caused by thermal degradation of the conductive polymer. The electrical conductivity decreases as a function of time, in agreement with a granular metal type structure, in which aging is due to the shrinking of the conductive polymer grains.[98] The lifetime of polymer electrolytic capacitors is specified in terms similar to non-solid electrolytic capacitors but its lifetime calculation follows other rules, leading to much longer operational lifetimes.[99][100][101]

Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid manganese dioxide electrolyte do not have wear-out failures, so they do not have a lifetime specification in the sense of non-solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors. Also, tantalum capacitors with non-solid electrolyte, the "wet tantalums", do not have a lifetime specification because they are hermetically sealed.

Failure modes, self-healing mechanism and application rules edit

The many different types of electrolytic capacitors exhibit different electrical long-term behavior, intrinsic failure modes, and self-healing mechanisms. Application rules for types with an intrinsic failure mode are specified to ensure capacitors with high reliability and long life.

Long-term electrical behavior, failure modes, self-healing mechanism, and application rules of the different types of electrolytic capacitors
Type of
electrolytic capacitors
Long-term
electrical behavior
Failure modes Self-healing
mechanism
Application
rules
Aluminum electrolytic capacitors,
non-solid electrolyte
Drying out over time,
capacitance decreases,
ESR increases
no unique
determinable
New generated oxide (forming)
by applying a voltage
Lifetime
calculation
Aluminum electrolytic capacitors,
solid polymer electrolyte
Deterioration of conductivity,
ESR increases
no unique
determinable
Insulating of faults
in the dielectric
by oxidation or evaporation
of the polymer electrolyte
Lifetime
calculation
Tantalum electrolytic capacitors,
solid MnO2 electrolyte
Stable Field crystallization
[87][102]
Thermally induced insulating
of faults in the dielectric
by oxidization of the electrolyte MnO2
into insulating MnO2O3
if current availability is limited
Voltage derating 50%
Series resistance 3 Ω/V
[103][104]
Tantalum electrolytic capacitors,
solid polymer electrolyte
Deterioration of conductivity,
ESR increases
Field crystallization
[87][102]
Insulating of faults
in the dielectric by oxidation or evaporation
of the polymer electrolyte
Voltage derating 20 %
[103][104]
Niobium electrolytic capacitors,
solid MnO2 electrolyte
Stable no unique
determinable
Thermally induced insulation of faults
in the dielectric
by oxidation of Nb2O5
into insulating NbO2
Niobium anode:
voltage derating 50%
Niobium oxide anode:
voltage derating 20 %
[103][104]
Niobium electrolytic capacitors,
solid polymer electrolyte
Deterioration of conductivity,
ESR increases
no unique
determinable
Insulating of faults
in the dielectric
by oxidation or evaporation
of the polymer electrolyte
Niobium anode:
voltage derating 50%
Niobium oxide anode:
voltage derating 20 %
[103][104]
Hybrid aluminum electrolytic capacitors,
solid polymer + non-solid electrolyte
Deterioration of conductivity,
drying out over time,
capacitance decreases,
ESR increases
no unique
determinable
New generated oxide (forming)
by applying a voltage
Lifetime
calculation

Performance after storage edit

All electrolytic capacitors are "aged" during manufacturing by applying the rated voltage at high temperature for a sufficient time to repair all cracks and weaknesses that may have occurred during production. However, a particular problem with non-solid aluminum models may occur after storage or unpowered periods. Chemical processes (corrosion) can weaken the oxide layer, which may lead to a higher leakage current. Most modern electrolytic systems are chemically inert and do not exhibit corrosion problems, even after storage times of two years or longer. Non-solid electrolytic capacitors using organic solvents like GBL as electrolyte do not have problems with high leakage current after prolonged storage.[73] They can be stored for up to 10 years without problems[61]

Storage times can be tested using accelerated shelf-life testing, which requires storage without applied voltage at the upper category temperature for a certain period, usually 1000 hours. This shelf life test is a good indicator for chemical stability and of the oxide layer, because all chemical reactions are accelerated by higher temperatures. Nearly all commercial series of non-solid electrolytic capacitors fulfill the 1000 hour shelf life test. However, many series are specified only for two years of storage. This also ensures solderability of the terminals.

For antique radio equipment or for electrolytic capacitors built in the 1970s or earlier, "preconditioning" may be appropriate. This is performed by applying the rated voltage to the capacitor via a series resistor of approximately 1 kΩ for one hour, allowing the oxide layer to repair itself through self-healing. Capacitors that fail leakage current requirements after preconditioning may have experienced mechanical damage.[94]

Electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolytes do not have preconditioning requirements.

Additional information edit

Capacitor symbols edit

Electrolytic capacitor symbols

Parallel connection edit

If an individual capacitor within a bank of parallel capacitors develops a short, the entire energy of the capacitor bank discharges through that short. Thus, large capacitors, particularly high voltage types, should be individually protected against sudden discharge.

Series connection edit

In applications where high withstanding voltages are needed, electrolytic capacitors can be connected in series. Because of individual variation in insulation resistance, and thus the leakage current when voltage is applied, the voltage is not distributed evenly across each series capacitor. This can result in the voltage rating of an individual capacitor being exceeded. A passive or active balancer circuit must be provided in order to equalize the voltage across each individual capacitor.[61][94]

Polarity marking edit

Polarity marking for polymer electrolytic capacitors

 
 
Rectangular polymer capacitors,
tantalum as well as aluminum,
have a polarity marking
on the anode (plus) side

Cylindrical polymer capacitors
have a polarity marking
on the cathode (minus) side

Imprinted markings edit

Electrolytic capacitors, like most other electronic components, are marked, space permitting, with

  • manufacturer's name or trademark;
  • manufacturer's type designation;
  • polarity of the terminations (for polarized capacitors)
  • rated capacitance;
  • tolerance on rated capacitance
  • rated voltage and nature of supply (AC or DC)
  • climatic category or rated temperature;
  • year and month (or week) of manufacture;
  • certification marks of safety standards (for safety EMI/RFI suppression capacitors)

Smaller capacitors use a shorthand notation. The most commonly used format is: XYZ J/K/M “V”, where XYZ represents the capacitance (calculated as XY × 10Z pF), the letters K or M indicate the tolerance (±10% and ±20% respectively) and “V” represents the working voltage.

Examples:

  • 105K 330V implies a capacitance of 10 × 105 pF = 1 µF (K = ±10%) with a rated voltage of 330 V.
  • 476M 100V implies a capacitance of 47 × 106 pF = 47 µF (M = ±20%) with a rated voltage of 100 V.

Capacitance, tolerance and date of manufacture can be indicated with a short code specified in IEC/EN 60062. Examples of short-marking of the rated capacitance (microfarads): µ47 = 0,47 µF, 4µ7 = 4,7 µF, 47µ = 47 µF

The date of manufacture is often printed according to international standards.

  • Version 1: coding with year/week numeral code, "1208" is "2012, week number 8".
  • Version 2: coding with year code/month code. The year codes are: "R" = 2003, "S"= 2004, "T" = 2005, "U" = 2006, "V" = 2007, "W" = 2008, "X" = 2009, "A" = 2010, "B" = 2011, "C" = 2012, "D" = 2013, “E” = 2014 etc. Month codes are: "1" to "9" = Jan. to Sept., "O" = October, "N" = November, "D" = December. "X5" is then "2009, May"

For very small capacitors no marking is possible. Here only the traceability of the manufacturers can ensure the identification of a type.

Standardization edit

The standardization for all electrical, electronic components and related technologies follows the rules given by the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC),[106] a non-profit, non-governmental international standards organization.[107][108]

The definition of the characteristics and the procedure of the test methods for capacitors for use in electronic equipment are set out in the Generic specification:

  • IEC/EN 60384-1 - Fixed capacitors for use in electronic equipment

The tests and requirements to be met by aluminum and tantalum electrolytic capacitors for use in electronic equipment for approval as standardized types are set out in the following sectional specifications:

  • IEC/EN 60384-3—Surface mount fixed tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide solid electrolyte
  • IEC/EN 60384-4—Aluminium electrolytic capacitors with solid (MnO2) and non-solid electrolyte
  • IEC/EN 60384-15—Fixed tantalum capacitors with non-solid and solid electrolyte
  • IEC/EN 60384-18—Fixed aluminium electrolytic surface mount capacitors with solid (MnO2) and non-solid electrolyte
  • IEC/EN 60384-24—Surface mount fixed tantalum electrolytic capacitors with conductive polymer solid electrolyte
  • IEC/EN 60384-25—Surface mount fixed aluminium electrolytic capacitors with conductive polymer solid electrolyte
  • IEC/EN 60384-26—Fixed aluminium electrolytic capacitors with conductive polymer solid electrolyte

Market edit

The market for electrolytic capacitors in 2008 was roughly 30% of the total market in value

  • Aluminum electrolytic capacitors—US$3.9 billion (22%);
  • Tantalum electrolytic capacitors—US$2.2 billion (12%);

In number of pieces, these capacitors cover about 10% of the total capacitor market, or about 100 to 120 billion pieces.[109]

Manufacturers and products edit

Worldwide operating manufacturers and their electrolytic capacitor product program
Manufacturer Aluminum
electrolytic capacitors
Tantalum
electrolytic capacitors
Niobium
electrolytic
capacitors
SMD
Radial
Power
SI, ST
Polymer
SMD
Radial
Polymer
Hybrid
SMD
MnO2
SMD
Polymer
Wet
electrolyte
SMD
MnO2
Polymer
AVX - - - - X X X X
CapXon X X X X - - - -
CDE Cornell Dubilier X X X X X X - -
Capacitor Industries - X - - - - - -
Chinsan, (Elite) X X X - - - - -
Daewoo, (Partsnic) 2018-06-12 at the Wayback Machine X X - - - - - -
Elna 2015-03-14 at the Wayback Machine X X X - - - - -
- X - - X X - -
Frolyt X X - - - - - -
Hitachi - X - - - - - -
X X X - X - - -
Itelcond - X - - - - - -
X X - - - - - -
Jianghai X X X X - - - -
Kaimei Electronic Corp, (Jamicon) X X - - - - - -
KEMET 2013-12-12 at the Wayback Machine X X X - X X X -
Lelon X X X - - - - -
MAN YUE, (Samxon) X X - - - - - -
- - - - X - X -
X X X X - - - -
NIC X X X X X - X -
Nichicon 2018-06-12 at the Wayback Machine X X X - - - - -
Panasonic, Matsushita X X X X - - X -
Richey X X - - - - - -
ROHM - - - - X - X -
Rubycon X X X - - - - -
X X X - - - - -
X - - X - - - -
TDK EPCOS X X - - - - - -
Teapo (Luxon) 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine X X X - - - - -
Vishay X X X - X X X X
Yageo X X X - - - - -

Date of the table: March 2015

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ J.L. Stevens, A.C. Geiculescu, T.F. Strange, Dielectric Aluminum Oxides: Nano-Structural Features and Composites PDF 2014-12-29 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ T. Kárník, AVX, NIOBIUM OXIDE FOR CAPACITOR MANUFACTURING, METAL 2008, 13. –15. 5. 2008, PDF
  3. ^ Jeng-Kuei Chang, Chia-Mei Lin, Chi-Min Liao, Chih-Hsiung Chen, Wen-Ta Tsai, Journal of the Electrochemical Society, 2004. Effect of Heat-Treatment on Characteristics of Anodized Aluminum Oxide Formed in Ammonium Adipate Solution [1] 2021-02-25 at the Wayback Machine DOI: 10.1149/1.1646140
  4. ^ Th. F. Strange, T. R. Marshall, Very high volt oxide formation of aluminum for electrolytic capacitors, US Patent 6299752 B1, 9. Okt. 2001, [2]
  5. ^ a b c d A. Albertsen, Jianghai Europe, Keep your distance – Voltage Proof of Electrolytic Capacitors, PDF 2013-01-08 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ a b "KDK, Specifications for Etched Foil for Anode, Low Voltage" (PDF).
  7. ^ I.Horacek, T.Zednicek, S.Zednicek, T.Karnik, J.Petrzilek, P.Jacisko, P.Gregorova, AVX, High CV Tantalum Capacitors - Challenges and Limitations [3] 2014-03-09 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ See:
    • Runge, Jude Mary (2018). The Metallurgy of Anodizing Aluminum: Connecting Science to Practice. Cham Switzerland: Springer International Publishing AG. p. 196. ISBN 9783319721774.
    • Wilson, E. (1898). "Aluminium as an electrode in cells for direct and alternate currents". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. 63 (389–400): 329–347. Bibcode:1898RSPS...63..329W. doi:10.1098/rspl.1898.0040. S2CID 98508421.; see p. 329.
    • Buff, H. (1857). "Ueber das electrische Verhalten des Aluminiums" [On the electrical behaviour of aluminium]. Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie (in German). 102 (3): 265–284. doi:10.1002/jlac.18571020302.
  9. ^ See:
    • Ducretet, E. (1875). "Note sur un rhéotome liquide à direction constante, fondé sur une propriété nouvelle de l'aluminium" [Note on a liquid rheotome with a constant direction, based on a new property of aluminum]. Journal de Physique (in French). 4: 84–85.
    • Ducretet, E. (1875). "Note relative à la résistance électro-chimique, offerte par l'aluminium employé comme électrode positive dans un voltamètre" [Note regarding electrochemical resistance offered by aluminum used as a positive electrode in a voltmeter]. Comptes Rendus (in French). 80: 280.
  10. ^ Pollack, Charles. "Elektrischer Flüssigkeitskondesator mit Aluminiumelektroden" [Electrical liquid condenser [i.e., capacitor] with aluminium electrodes]. D.R.P. 92564, filed: 14. January 1896, granted: 19. May 1897.
  11. ^ Both, Jens (January–February 2015). "Electrolytic capacitors, 1890 to 1925: early history and basic principle". IEEE Electrical Insulation Magazine. 31 (1): 22–29. doi:10.1109/MEI.2015.6996675. S2CID 24224453.
  12. ^ US Patent Nr. 1774455, Electric condenser, filed October 19, 1925, granted August 26, 1930
  13. ^ Samuel Ruben: Inventor, Scholar, and Benefactor by Kathryn R. Bullock PDF www.electrochem.org
  14. ^ a b c P. McK. Deeley, Electrolytic Capacitors, The Cornell-Dubilier Electric Corp. South Plainfield New Jersey, 1938
  15. ^ Elektrolytischer Kondensator mit aufgerollten Metallbändern als Belegungen, Alfred Eckel Hydra-Werke, Berlin-Charlottenburg, DRP 498 794, filed May 12, 1927, granted May 8, 1930
  16. ^ William Dubilier, Electric Condenser, US Patent 468787
  17. ^ Henry B.O. Davis (1983) Electrical and Electronic Technologies: A Chronology of Events and Inventors from 1900 to 1940, p 111: "The Mershon Company put electrolytic capacitors on the market. The capacitors packed a high capacitance in a very small space compared to existing paper capacitors.
  18. ^ Philips Data Handbook PA01, 1986, the first 125 °C series "118 AHT"
  19. ^ J. Both, The modern era of aluminum electrolytic capacitors, Electrical Insulation Magazine, IEEE, Volume:31, Issue: 4, July–August 2015, ieeexplore.ieee.org
  20. ^ D. F. Tailor, Tantalum and Tantalum Compounds, Fansteel Inc., Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, Vol. 19, 2nd ed. 1969 John Wiley & sons, Inc.
  21. ^ R. L. Taylor and H. E. Haring, "A metal semi-conductor capacitor", J. Electrochem. Soc., vol. 103, p. 611, November, 1956.
  22. ^ E. K. Reed, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Characterization of Tantalum Polymer Capacitors, NEPP Task 1.21.5, Phase 1, FY05
  23. ^ D. A. McLean, F. S. Power, Proc. Inst. Radio Engrs. 44 (1956) 872
  24. ^ Preston Robinson, Sprague, US Patent 3066247, 25. Aug. 1954 - 27. Nov. 1962
  25. ^ Sprague, Dr. Preston Robinson Granted 103rd Patent Since Joining Company In 1929 [4][permanent dead link]
  26. ^ A. Fraioli, Recent Advances in the Solid-State Electrolytic Capacitor, IRE Transactions on Component Parts, June 1958
  27. ^ R. J. Millard, Sprague, US Patent 2936514, October 24, 1955 - May 17, 1960
  28. ^ W. Serjak, H. Seyeda, Ch. Cymorek, Tantalum Availability: 2000 and Beyond, PCI, March/April 2002, [5] 2014-08-08 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-08-08. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  30. ^ J.Both, Valvo, SAL contra Tantal, Zuverlässige Technologien im Wettstreit, nachrichten elektronik 35, 1981
  31. ^ "Homepage". www.computerposter.ch.
  32. ^ K. Lischka, Spiegel 27.09.2007, 40 Jahre Elektro-Addierer: Der erste Taschenrechner wog 1,5 Kilo, [6]
  33. ^ Larry E. Mosley, Intel Corporation, Capacitor Impedance Needs For Future Microprocessors, CARTS USA 2006, ecadigitallibrary.com 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ Niwa, Shinichi; Taketani, Yutaka (1996). "Development of new series of aluminium solid capacitors with organic semiconductive electrolyte (OS-CON)". Journal of Power Sources. 60 (2): 165–171. Bibcode:1996JPS....60..165N. doi:10.1016/S0378-7753(96)80006-1.
  35. ^ "Kuch, Investigation of charge transfer complexes:TCNQ-TTF" (PDF).
  36. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-14. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
  37. ^ About the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000, Advanced Information, October 10, 2000,[7]
  38. ^ Y. K. ZHANG, J. LIN,Y. CHEN, Polymer Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors with Chemically-Polymerized Polypyrrole (PPy) as Cathode Materials Part I. Effect of Monomer Concentration and Oxidant on Electrical Properties of the Capacitors, PDF 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ U. Merker, K. Wussow, W. Lövenich, H. C. Starck GmbH, New Conducting Polymer Dispersions for Solid Electrolyte Capacitors, ecadigitallibrary.com 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ "Electronic Components - Panasonic Industrial Devices". www.panasonic.com.
  41. ^ John Prymak, Kemet, Replacing MnO2 with Polymers, 1999 CARTS
  42. ^ F. Jonas, H.C.Starck, Baytron, Basic chemical and physical properties, Präsentation 2003, [www.hcstarck.de]
  43. ^ Ch. Schnitter, A. Michaelis, U. Merker, H.C. Starck, Bayer, New Niobium Based Materials for Solid Electrolyte Capacitors, Carts 2002
  44. ^ T. Zednicek, S. Sita, C. McCracken, W. A. Millman, J. Gill, AVX, Niobium Oxide Technology Roadmap, CARTS 2002 [8] 2014-02-24 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Y. Pozdeev-Freeman, P. Maden, Vishay, Solid-Electrolyte Niobium Capacitors Exhibit Similar Performance to Tantalum, Feb 1, 2002,
  46. ^ Shigeru Uzawa, Akihiko Komat-u, Tetsushi Ogawara, Rubycon Corporation, Ultra Low Impedance Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor with Water based Electrolyte or . Archived from the original on 2012-05-24. Retrieved 2016-02-05.
  47. ^ J. L. Stevens, T. R. Marshall, A. C. Geiculescu m, C. R. Feger, T. F. Strange, Carts USA 2006, The Effects of Electrolyte Composition on the Deformation Characteristics of Wet Aluminum ICD Capacitors, [10] 2014-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ Alfonso Berduque, Zongli Dou, Rong Xu, KEMET, Electrochemical Studies for Aluminium Electrolytic Capacitor Applications: Corrosion Analysis of Aluminium in Ethylene Glycol-Based Electrolytes PDF 2016-12-28 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ Hillman; Helmold (2004), Identification of Missing or Insufficient Electrolyte Constituents in Failed Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors (PDF), DFR solutions
  50. ^ Ch. Reynolds, AVX, Technical Information, Reliability Management of Tantalum Capacitors, PDF 2013-08-06 at the Wayback Machine
  51. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-14. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  52. ^ a b c A. Teverovsky, Perot Systems Code 562, NASA GSFCE, Effect of Surge Current Testing on Reliability of Solid Tantalum Capacitors ecadigitallibrary.com 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  53. ^ Imam, A.M., Condition Monitoring of Electrolytic Capacitors for Power Electronics Applications, Dissertation, Georgia Institute of Technology (2007) smartech.gatech.edu
  54. ^ Nichicon. "General Description of Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors" PDF 2018-02-05 at the Wayback Machine section "2-3-2 Reverse Voltage".
  55. ^ Rubycon. "Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors FAQ"
  56. ^ CDM Cornell Dubilier. "Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor Application Guide" p. 4 and p. 6 and p. 9
  57. ^ I. Bishop, J. Gill, AVX Ltd., Reverse Voltage Behavior of Solid Tantalum Capacitors PDF
  58. ^ P. Vasina, T. Zednicek, Z. Sita, J. Sikula, J. Pavelka, AVX, Thermal and Electrical Breakdown Versus Reliability of Ta2O5 Under Both – Bipolar Biasing Conditions PDF 2013-08-06 at the Wayback Machine
  59. ^ A. Berduque, Kemet, Low ESR Aluminium Electrolytic Capacitors for Medium to High Voltage Applications, kemet.com[permanent dead link]
  60. ^ Solutions, DfR. "Resources - DfR Solutions" (PDF). www.dfrsolutions.com.
  61. ^ a b c Vishay BCcomponents, Introduction Aluminum Capacitors, Revision: 10-Sep-13 1 Document Number: 28356, PDF 2016-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
  62. ^ "Vishay, Engineering Solutions, Aluminum Capacitors in Power Supplies" (PDF).
  63. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-14. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  64. ^ "CDE, Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor Application Guide" (PDF).
  65. ^ "Nichicon, Application Guidelines for Aluminum Electolytic Capacitors" (PDF).
  66. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-01-12. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  67. ^ I. Salisbury, AVX, Thermal Management of Surface Mounted Tantalum Capacitors [11] 2013-08-06 at the Wayback Machine
  68. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-07-25. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  69. ^ Vishay, Application Notes, AC Ripple Current, Calculations Solid Tantalum Capacitors [12]
  70. ^ KEMET, Ripple Current Capabilities, Technical Update 2004
  71. ^ Vitoratos, E.; Sakkopoulos, S.; Dalas, E.; Paliatsas, N.; Karageorgopoulos, D.; Petraki, F.; Kennou, S.; Choulis, S. (2009). "Thermal degradation mechanisms of PEDOT:PSS". Organic Electronics. 10: 61–66. doi:10.1016/j.orgel.2008.10.008. hdl:20.500.14279/837.
  72. ^ Vishay, Aluminium capacitors, Introduction, Revision: 10-Sep-13 1 Document Number: 28356, Chapter Storage, page 7 vishay.com 2016-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
  73. ^ a b Ch. Baur, N. Will, Epcos, Long-term stability of aluminum electrolytic capacitors Built to last 2015-01-28 at the Wayback Machine
  74. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-07-25. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
  75. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-11-23. Retrieved 2015-01-02.
  76. ^ AVX, ANALYSIS OF SOLID TANTALUM CAPACITOR LEAKAGE CURRENT PDF
  77. ^ CDE, Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor Application Guide, PDF
  78. ^ "Understand Capacitor Soakage to Optimize Analog Systems" by Bob Pease 1982 [13] 2010-01-23 at the Wayback Machine
  79. ^ * "Modeling Dielectric Absorption in Capacitors", by Ken Kundert
  80. ^ (PDF). www.niccomp.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
  81. ^ IEC/EN 61709, Electric components. Reliability. Reference conditions for failure rates and stress models for conversion
  82. ^ "MIL-HDBK-217 F NOTICE-2 RELIABILITY PREDICTION Electronic". www.everyspec.com.
  83. ^ SQC online table calculator, Capacitor Failure Rate Model, MIL-HDBK-217, Rev. F - Notice 2 [14]
  84. ^ Vishay. "Vishay - Capacitors - Vishay - Silicon Capacitance Calculator". www.vishay.com.
  85. ^ Hitachi, Precautions in using Tantalum Capacitors, 4.2 Failure Rate Calculation Formula [15] 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  86. ^ a b c Sam G. Parler, Cornell Dubilier, Reliability of CDE Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors (PDF 2014-06-10 at the Wayback Machine)
  87. ^ a b c T.Zednicek, AVX, A Study of Field Crystallization in Tantalum Capacitors and its effect on DCL and Reliability, [16]
  88. ^ a b c A. Albertsen, Jianghai Europe, Reliability of Electrolytic Capacitors, PDF 2020-03-13 at the Wayback Machine
  89. ^ Hitachi aic-europe, Explanations to the useful life, PDF 2016-02-05 at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ NCC, Technical Note Judicious Use of Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors PDF 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine
  91. ^ Rubycon, LIFE OF ALUMINUM ELECTROLYTIC CAPACITORS, S. 9 (PDF 2015-08-07 at the Wayback Machine)
  92. ^ A. Albertsen, Jianghai, Electrolytic Capacitor Lifetime Estimation PDF 2013-01-08 at the Wayback Machine
  93. ^ . aic-europe.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
  94. ^ a b c Epcos, Aluminum electrolytic capacitors, General technical information PDF
  95. ^ Panasonic (10-degree-rule; PDF 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine)
  96. ^ NIC Life expectancy of aluminum electrolytic capacitors (rev.1) (PDF 2015-08-24 at the Wayback Machine)
  97. ^ Gregory Mirsky, Determining end-of-life, ESR, and lifetime calculations for electrolytic capacitors at higher temperatures, EDN, August 20, 2008, edn.com
  98. ^ E. Vitoratos, S. Sakkopoulos, E. Dalas, N. Paliatsas, D. Karageorgopoulos, F. Petraki, S. Kennou, S.A. Choulis, Thermal degradation mechanisms of PEDOT:PSS, Organic Electronics, Volume 10, Issue 1, February 2009, Pages 61–66, [17]
  99. ^ Nichicon, Technical Guide, Calculation Formula of Lifetime PDF
  100. ^ Estimating of Lifetime FUJITSU MEDIA DEVICES LIMITED PDF 2013-12-24 at the Wayback Machine
  101. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-09-15. Retrieved 2013-10-02.
  102. ^ a b VISHAY, DC LEAKAGE FAILURE MODE, PDF 2018-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
  103. ^ a b c d J.Gill, T. Zednicek, AVX, VOLTAGE DERATING RULES FOR SOLID TANTALUM AND NIOBIUM CAPACITORS, [18] 2013-08-06 at the Wayback Machine
  104. ^ a b c d R. Faltus, AVX, Advanced capacitors ensure long-term control-circuit stability, 7/2/2012, EDT
  105. ^ "コンデンサメーカー一覧サイト - 固体コンデンサ Solid capacitor". capacitor.web.fc2.com.
  106. ^ Commission, IEC - International Electrotechnical. "Welcome to the IEC - International Electrotechnical Commission". www.iec.ch.
  107. ^ "Welcome to the IEC Webstore". webstore.iec.ch.
  108. ^ "Beuth Verlag - Normen und Fachliteratur seit 1924". www.beuth.de.
  109. ^ Electronic Capacitors, SIC 3675, NAICS 334414: Electronic Capacitor Manufacturing, Industry report:

Further reading edit

  • The Electrolytic Capacitor; 1st Ed; Alexander Georgiev; Murray Hill Books; 191 pages; 1945. (archive)

External links edit

electrolytic, capacitor, polarized, capacitor, redirects, here, other, types, polarized, capacitors, supercapacitor, electrolytic, capacitor, polarized, capacitor, whose, anode, positive, plate, made, metal, that, forms, insulating, oxide, layer, through, anod. Polarized capacitor redirects here For other types of polarized capacitors see Supercapacitor An electrolytic capacitor is a polarized capacitor whose anode or positive plate is made of a metal that forms an insulating oxide layer through anodization This oxide layer acts as the dielectric of the capacitor A solid liquid or gel electrolyte covers the surface of this oxide layer serving as the cathode or negative plate of the capacitor Because of their very thin dielectric oxide layer and enlarged anode surface electrolytic capacitors have a much higher capacitance voltage CV product per unit volume than ceramic capacitors or film capacitors and so can have large capacitance values There are three families of electrolytic capacitor aluminium electrolytic capacitors tantalum electrolytic capacitors and niobium electrolytic capacitors Most common styles of aluminium and tantalum electrolytic capacitorsAn assortment of electrolytic capacitorsThis article duplicates the scope of other articles specifically Aluminium electrolytic capacitor Please discuss this issue and help introduce a summary style to the article May 2020 The large capacitance of electrolytic capacitors makes them particularly suitable for passing or bypassing low frequency signals and for storing large amounts of energy They are widely used for decoupling or noise filtering in power supplies and DC link circuits for variable frequency drives for coupling signals between amplifier stages and storing energy as in a flashlamp Electrolytic capacitors are polarized components because of their asymmetrical construction and must be operated with a higher potential i e more positive on the anode than on the cathode at all times For this reason the polarity is marked on the device housing Applying a reverse polarity voltage or a voltage exceeding the maximum rated working voltage of as little as 1 or 1 5 volts can damage the dielectric and causing catastrophic failure of the capacitor itself Failure of electrolytic capacitors can result in an explosion or fire potentially causing damage to other components as well as injuries Bipolar electrolytic capacitors which may be operated with either polarity are also made using special constructions with two anodes connected in series A bipolar electrolytic capacitor can also be made by connecting two normal electrolytic capacitors in series anode to anode or cathode to cathode Contents 1 General information 1 1 Electrolytic capacitors family tree 1 2 Charge principle 1 3 Basic materials and construction 1 4 Capacitance and volumetric efficiency 1 5 Basic construction of non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors 1 6 Basic construction of solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors 2 Types and features of electrolytic capacitors 2 1 Comparison of electrolytic capacitor types 2 2 Comparison of electrical parameters 2 3 Styles of aluminium and tantalum electrolytic capacitors 3 History 3 1 Origin 3 2 Wet aluminum capacitor 3 3 Dry aluminum capacitor 3 4 Tantalum capacitors 3 5 Solid electrolytes 3 6 Niobium capacitors 3 7 Water based electrolytes 4 Electrical characteristics 4 1 Series equivalent circuit 4 2 Capacitance standard values and tolerances 4 3 Rated and category voltage 4 4 Surge voltage 4 5 Transient voltage 4 6 Reverse voltage 4 7 Impedance 4 8 ESR and dissipation factor tan d 4 9 Ripple current 4 10 Current surge peak or pulse current 4 11 Leakage current 4 12 Dielectric absorption soakage 5 Operational characteristics 5 1 Reliability failure rate 5 2 Lifetime 5 3 Failure modes self healing mechanism and application rules 5 4 Performance after storage 6 Additional information 6 1 Capacitor symbols 6 2 Parallel connection 6 3 Series connection 6 4 Polarity marking 6 5 Imprinted markings 6 6 Standardization 6 7 Market 6 8 Manufacturers and products 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksGeneral information editElectrolytic capacitors family tree edit As to the basic construction principles of electrolytic capacitors there are three different types aluminum tantalum and niobium capacitors Each of these three capacitor families uses non solid and solid manganese dioxide or solid polymer electrolytes so a great spread of different combinations of anode material and solid or non solid electrolytes is available nbsp Depending on the nature of the anode metal used and the electrolyte used there is a wide variety of electrolytic capacitorsCharge principle edit Like other conventional capacitors electrolytic capacitors store the electric energy statically by charge separation in an electric field in the dielectric oxide layer between two electrodes The non solid or solid electrolyte in principle is the cathode which thus forms the second electrode of the capacitor This and the storage principle distinguish them from electrochemical capacitors or supercapacitors in which the electrolyte generally is the ionic conductive connection between two electrodes and the storage occurs with statically double layer capacitance and electrochemical pseudocapacitance Basic materials and construction edit nbsp Basic principle of anodic oxidation forming in which by applying a voltage with a current source an oxide layer is formed on a metallic anodeElectrolytic capacitors use a chemical feature of some special metals previously called valve metals which on contact with a particular electrolyte form a very thin insulating oxide layer on their surface by anodic oxidation which can function as a dielectric There are three different anode metals in use for electrolytic capacitors Aluminum electrolytic capacitors use a high purity etched aluminium foil with aluminium oxide as dielectric Tantalum electrolytic capacitors use a sintered pellet slug of high purity tantalum powder with tantalum pentoxide as dielectric Niobium electrolytic capacitors use a sintered slug of high purity niobium or niobium oxide powder with niobium pentoxide as dielectric To increase their capacitance per unit volume all anode materials are either etched or sintered and have a rough surface structure with a much higher surface area compared to a smooth surface of the same area or the same volume By applying a positive voltage to the above mentioned anode material in an electrolytic bath an oxide barrier layer with a thickness corresponding to the applied voltage will be formed formation This oxide layer acts as dielectric in an electrolytic capacitor The properties of this oxide layers are given in the following table Characteristics of the different oxide layers in aluminum tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors 1 2 Anode material Dielectric Oxidestructure Relativepermittivity Breakdownvoltage V µm Electriclayerthickness nm V Aluminum Aluminium oxide Al2O3 amorphous 9 6 710 1 4crystalline 11 6 14 2 3 800 1000 4 1 25 1 0Tantalum Tantalum pentoxide Ta2O5 amorphous 27 625 1 6Niobium orNiobium oxide Niobium pentoxide Nb2O5 amorphous 41 400 2 5 After forming a dielectric oxide on the rough anode structure a counter electrode has to match the rough insulating oxide surface This is accomplished by the electrolyte which acts as the cathode electrode of an electrolytic capacitor There are many different electrolytes in use Generally they are distinguished into two species non solid and solid electrolytes As a liquid medium which has ion conductivity caused by moving ions non solid electrolytes can easily fit the rough structures Solid electrolytes which have electron conductivity can fit the rough structures with the help of special chemical processes like pyrolysis for manganese dioxide or polymerization for conducting polymers Comparing the permittivities of the different oxide materials it is seen that tantalum pentoxide has a permittivity approximately three times higher than aluminum oxide Tantalum electrolytic capacitors of a given CV value theoretically are therefore smaller than aluminium electrolytic capacitors In practice different safety margins to reach reliable components makes a comparison difficult The anodically generated insulating oxide layer is destroyed if the polarity of the applied voltage changes Capacitance and volumetric efficiency edit nbsp A dielectric material is placed between two conducting plates electrodes each of area A and with separation d Electrolytic capacitors are based on the principle of a plate capacitor whose capacitance increases with larger electrode area A higher dielectric permittivity e and thinness of dielectric d C e A d displaystyle C varepsilon cdot frac A d nbsp The dielectric thickness of electrolytic capacitors is very small in the range of nanometers per volt On the other hand the voltage strengths of these oxide layers are quite high With this very thin dielectric oxide layer combined with a sufficiently high dielectric strength the electrolytic capacitors can achieve a high volumetric capacitance This is one reason for the high capacitance values of electrolytic capacitors compared to conventional capacitors All etched or sintered anodes have a much higher surface area compared to a smooth surface of the same area or the same volume That increases the capacitance value depending on the rated voltage by a factor of up to 200 for non solid aluminium electrolytic capacitors as well as for solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors 5 6 7 The large surface compared to a smooth one is the second reason for the relatively high capacitance values of electrolytic capacitors compared with other capacitor families Because the forming voltage defines the oxide layer thickness the desired voltage rating can be produced very simply Electrolytic capacitors have high volumetric efficiency the so called CV product defined as the product of capacitance and voltage divided by volume Basic construction of non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors edit Basic construction of a non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitor nbsp Opened winding of an electrolytic capacitor with multiple connected foils nbsp Closeup cross section of an aluminium electrolytic capacitor design showing capacitor anode foil with oxide layer paper spacer soaked with electrolyte and cathode foil nbsp Construction of a typical single ended aluminium electrolytic capacitor with non solid electrolyteBasic construction of solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors edit Construction of a solid tantalum chip capacitor with manganese dioxide electrolyte nbsp The capacitor cell of a tantalum electrolytic capacitor consists of sintered tantalum powder nbsp Schematic representation of the structure of a sintered tantalum electrolytic capacitor with solid electrolyte and the cathode contacting layers nbsp Construction of a typical SMD tantalum electrolytic chip capacitor with solid electrolyteTypes and features of electrolytic capacitors editComparison of electrolytic capacitor types edit Combinations of anode materials for electrolytic capacitors and the electrolytes used have given rise to wide varieties of capacitor types with different properties An outline of the main characteristics of the different types is shown in the table below Overview of the key features of the different types of electrolytic capacitor Electrolyticcapacitor family Electrolyte Capacitancerange µF Max rated voltage V Max temperature C Aluminium electrolytic capacitoretched foils Non solid organic electrolyte e g GBL DMF DMA 0 1 1 000 000 550 105 125 150Non solid e g borax glycol 0 1 2 700 000 630 85 105Non solid water based 1 18 000 100 85 105Solid polymer 10 1 500 25 105Hybrid polymer and non solid 6 8 1 000 125 105 125Tantalumelectrolytic capacitor sintered anode Non solid sulfuric acid 0 1 18 000 630 125 200Solid manganese dioxide 0 1 3 300 125 125 150Solid polymer 10 1 500 25 105Niobium oxide electrolytic capacitorsintered anode Solid manganese dioxide 1 1 500 10 105Solid polymer 4 7 470 16 105The non solid or so called wet aluminum electrolytic capacitors were and are the cheapest among all other conventional capacitors They not only provide the cheapest solutions for high capacitance or voltage values for decoupling and buffering purposes but are also insensitive to low ohmic charging and discharging as well as to low energy transients Non solid electrolytic capacitors can be found in nearly all areas of electronic devices with the exception of military applications Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte as surface mountable chip capacitors are mainly used in electronic devices in which little space is available or a low profile is required They operate reliably over a wide temperature range without large parameter deviations In military and space applications only tantalum electrolytic capacitors have the necessary approvals Niobium electrolytic capacitors are in direct competition with industrial tantalum electrolytic capacitors because niobium is more readily available Their properties are comparable The electrical properties of aluminium tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors have been greatly improved by the polymer electrolyte Comparison of electrical parameters edit In order to compare the different characteristics of the different electrolytic capacitor types capacitors with the same dimensions and of similar capacitance and voltage are compared in the following table In such a comparison the values for ESR and ripple current load are the most important parameters for the use of electrolytic capacitors in modern electronic equipment The lower the ESR the higher the ripple current per volume and better functionality of the capacitor in the circuit However better electrical parameters come with higher prices Comparison of the most important characteristics of different types of electrolytic capacitors Electrolytic capacitor family Type 1 Dimension DxL WxHxL mm Max ESR100 kHz 20 C mW Max ripple current 85 105 C mA Max leakage currentafter 2 min 2 µA wet Al electrolytic capacitors 1976 3 Ethylene glycol borax electrolyte Valvo 034 4 7 40 5x11 15 000 17 10 0 01CV wet Al electrolytic capacitors Organic electrolyte Vishay 036 RSP 100 10 5x11 1000 160 10 0 01CV wet Al electrolytic capacitors Ethylene glycol borax electrolyte NCC SMQ 100 10 5x11 900 180 10 0 01CV wet Al electrolytic capacitors Water based electrolyte Rubycon ZL 100 10 5x11 300 250 10 0 01CV wet Al electrolytic capacitors SMD Ethylene glycol borax electrolyte NIC NACY 220 10 6 3x8 300 300 10 0 01CV wet Al electrolytic capacitors SMDWater based electrolyte NIC NAZJ 220 16 6 3x8 160 600 10 0 01CV Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitorsMnO2 electrolyte Kemet T494 330 10 7 3x4 3x4 0 100 1285 10 0 01CV Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors Multianode MnO2 electrolyte Kemet T510 330 10 7 3x4 3x4 0 35 2500 10 0 01CV Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitorsPolymer electrolyte Kemet T543 330 10 7 3x4 3x4 0 10 4900 100 0 1CV Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors Multianode polymer Kemet T530 150 10 7 3x4 3x4 0 5 4970 100 0 1CV Solid niobium electrolytic capacitors MnO2 electrolyte AVX NOS 220 6 3 7 3x4 3x4 1 80 1461 20 0 02CV Solid niobium electrolytic capacitors Multianode MnO2 electrolyte AVX NBM 220 6 3 7 3x4 3x4 1 40 2561 20 0 02CV Solid Al electrolytic capacitors Polymer electrolyte Panasonic SP UE 180 6 3 7 3x4 3x4 2 7 3700 100 0 1CV Solid Al electrolytic capacitors Polymer electrolyte Kemet A700 100 10 7 3x4 3x4 0 10 4700 40 0 04CV Solid Al electrolytic capacitors Polymer electrolyte Panansonic SVP 120 6 3 6 3x6 17 2780 200 0 2CV Hybrid Al electrolytic capacitors Polymer non solid electrolyte Panasonic ZA 100 25 6 3x7 7 30 2000 10 0 01CV 1 Manufacturer series name capacitance voltage2 calculated for a capacitor 100 µF 10 V 3 from a 1976 data sheet Styles of aluminium and tantalum electrolytic capacitors edit Aluminium electrolytic capacitors form the bulk of the electrolytic capacitors used in electronics because of the large diversity of sizes and the inexpensive production Tantalum electrolytic capacitors usually used in the SMD version have a higher specific capacitance than the aluminum electrolytic capacitors and are used in devices with limited space or flat design such as laptops They are also used in military technology mostly in axial style hermetically sealed Niobium electrolytic chip capacitors are a new development in the market and are intended as a replacement for tantalum electrolytic chip capacitors Different styles of aluminum electrolytic capacitors nbsp Aluminium electrolytic SMD V vertical chip capacitors nbsp Axial style aluminum electrolytic capacitors nbsp Radial or single ended aluminum electrolytic capacitors nbsp Aluminum electrolytic capacitor with snap in terminals nbsp Aluminum electrolytic capacitors with screw terminalsDifferent styles of tantalum electrolytic capacitors nbsp Typical tantalum SMD capacitor nbsp Dipped lacquered tantalum pearl capacitors nbsp Axial style tantalum electrolytic capacitorsHistory edit nbsp Early small electrolytic capacitor from 1914 It had a capacitance of around 2 microfarads nbsp View of the anode of a wet aluminum electrolytic capacitor Bell System Technique 1929Origin edit The phenomenon that in an electrochemical process aluminum and such metals as tantalum niobium manganese titanium zinc cadmium etc can form an oxide layer which blocks an electric current from flowing in one direction but which allows current to flow in the opposite direction was first observed in 1857 by the German physicist and chemist Johann Heinrich Buff 1805 1878 8 It was first put to use in 1875 by the French researcher and founder Eugene Ducretet 9 who coined the term valve metal for such metals Charles Pollak born Karol Pollak a producer of accumulators found out that the oxide layer on an aluminum anode remained stable in a neutral or alkaline electrolyte even when the power was switched off In 1896 he filed a patent for an Electric liquid capacitor with aluminum electrodes de Elektrischer Flussigkeitskondensator mit Aluminiumelektroden based on his idea of using the oxide layer in a polarized capacitor in combination with a neutral or slightly alkaline electrolyte 10 11 Wet aluminum capacitor edit nbsp Various forms of historical anode structures for wet capacitors For all of these anodes the outer metallic container served as the cathodeThe first industrially realized electrolytic capacitors consisted of a metallic box used as the cathode It was filled with a borax electrolyte dissolved in water in which a folded aluminum anode plate was inserted Applying a DC voltage from outside an oxide layer was formed on the surface of the anode The advantage of these capacitors was that they were significantly smaller and cheaper than all other capacitors at this time relative to the realized capacitance value This construction with different styles of anode construction but with a case as cathode and container for the electrolyte was used up to the 1930s and was called a wet electrolytic capacitor in the sense of its having a high water content The first more common application of wet aluminum electrolytic capacitors was in large telephone exchanges to reduce relay hash noise on the 48 volt DC power supply The development of AC operated domestic radio receivers in the late 1920s created a demand for large capacitance for the time and high voltage capacitors for the valve amplifier technique typically at least 4 microfarads and rated at around 500 volts DC Waxed paper and oiled silk film capacitors were available but devices with that order of capacitance and voltage rating were bulky and prohibitively expensive Dry aluminum capacitor edit nbsp A dry electrolytic capacitor with 100 µF and 150 VThe ancestor of the modern electrolytic capacitor was patented by Samuel Ruben in 1925 12 13 who teamed with Philip Mallory the founder of the battery company that is now known as Duracell International Ruben s idea adopted the stacked construction of a silver mica capacitor He introduced a separated second foil to contact the electrolyte adjacent to the anode foil instead of using the electrolyte filled container as the capacitor s cathode The stacked second foil got its own terminal additional to the anode terminal and the container no longer had an electrical function This type of electrolytic capacitor combined with a liquid or gel like electrolyte of a non aqueous nature which is therefore dry in the sense of having a very low water content became known as the dry type of electrolytic capacitor 14 With Ruben s invention together with the invention of wound foils separated with a paper spacer 1927 by A Eckel of Hydra Werke Germany 15 the actual development of electrolytic capacitors began 14 William Dubilier whose first patent for electrolytic capacitors was filed in 1928 16 industrialized the new ideas for electrolytic capacitors and started the first large commercial production in 1931 in the Cornell Dubilier CD factory in Plainfield New Jersey 14 At the same time in Berlin Germany the Hydra Werke an AEG company started the production of electrolytic capacitors in large quantities Another manufacturer Ralph D Mershon had success in servicing the radio market demand for electrolytic capacitors 17 nbsp Miniaturization of aluminum electrolytic capacitors from 1960 to 2005 in case 10x16mm up to factor tenIn his 1896 patent Pollak already recognized that the capacitance of the capacitor increases when roughening the surface of the anode foil Today 2014 electrochemically etched low voltage foils can achieve an up to 200 fold increase in surface area compared to a smooth surface 5 6 Advances in the etching process are the reason for the dimension reductions in aluminum electrolytic capacitors over recent decades For aluminum electrolytic capacitors the decades from 1970 to 1990 were marked by the development of various new professional series specifically suited to certain industrial applications for example with very low leakage currents or with long life characteristics or for higher temperatures up to 125 C 18 19 Tantalum capacitors edit Main article Tantalum capacitor One of the first tantalum electrolytic capacitors were developed in 1930 by Tansitor Electronic Inc USA for military purposes 20 The basic construction of a wound cell was adopted and a tantalum anode foil was used together with a tantalum cathode foil separated with a paper spacer impregnated with a liquid electrolyte mostly sulfuric acid and encapsulated in a silver case The relevant development of solid electrolyte tantalum capacitors began some years after William Shockley John Bardeen and Walter Houser Brattain invented the transistor in 1947 It was invented by Bell Laboratories in the early 1950s as a miniaturized more reliable low voltage support capacitor to complement their newly invented transistor The solution found by R L Taylor and H E Haring at Bell Labs in early 1950 was based on experience with ceramics They ground tantalum to a powder which they pressed into a cylindrical form and then sintered at a high temperature between 1500 and 2000 C under vacuum conditions to produce a pellet slug 21 22 These first sintered tantalum capacitors used a non solid electrolyte which does not fit the concept of solid electronics In 1952 a targeted search at Bell Labs by D A McLean and F S Power for a solid electrolyte led to the invention of manganese dioxide as a solid electrolyte for a sintered tantalum capacitor 23 Although fundamental inventions came from Bell Labs the inventions for manufacturing commercially viable tantalum electrolytic capacitors came from researchers at the Sprague Electric Company Preston Robinson Sprague s Director of Research is considered to be the actual inventor of tantalum capacitors in 1954 24 25 His invention was supported by R J Millard who introduced the reform step in 1955 26 27 a significant improvement in which the dielectric of the capacitor was repaired after each dip and convert cycle of MnO2 deposition which dramatically reduced the leakage current of the finished capacitors Although solid tantalum capacitors offered capacitors with lower ESR and leakage current values than the aluminum electrolytic capacitors a 1980 price shock for tantalum dramatically reduced the applications of tantalum electrolytic capacitors especially in the entertainment industry 28 29 The industry switched back to using aluminum electrolytic capacitors Solid electrolytes edit nbsp Conductivity of non solid and solid electrolytesThe first solid electrolyte of manganese dioxide developed 1952 for tantalum capacitors had a conductivity 10 times better than all other types of non solid electrolytes It also influenced the development of aluminum electrolytic capacitors In 1964 the first aluminum electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte SAL electrolytic capacitor came on the market developed by Philips 30 With the beginning of digitalization Intel launched its first microcomputer the MCS 4 in 1971 In 1972 Hewlett Packard launched one of the first pocket calculators the HP 35 31 32 The requirements for capacitors increased in terms of lowering the equivalent series resistance ESR for bypass and decoupling capacitors 33 It was not until 1983 when a new step toward ESR reduction was taken by Sanyo with its OS CON aluminum electrolytic capacitors These capacitors used a solid organic conductor the charge transfer salt TTF TCNQ tetracyanoquinodimethane which provided an improvement in conductivity by a factor of 10 compared with the manganese dioxide electrolyte 34 35 36 The next step in ESR reduction was the development of conducting polymers by Alan J Heeger Alan MacDiarmid and Hideki Shirakawa in 1975 37 The conductivity of conductive polymers such as polypyrrole PPy 38 or PEDOT 39 is better than that of TCNQ by a factor of 100 to 500 and close to the conductivity of metals In 1991 Panasonic released its SP Cap 40 series of polymer aluminum electrolytic capacitors These aluminum electrolytic capacitors with polymer electrolytes reached very low ESR values directly comparable to ceramic multilayer capacitors MLCCs They were still less expensive than tantalum capacitors and with their flat design for laptops and cell phones competed with tantalum chip capacitors as well Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with PPy polymer electrolyte cathode followed three years later In 1993 NEC introduced its SMD polymer tantalum electrolytic capacitors called NeoCap In 1997 Sanyo followed with the POSCAP polymer tantalum chips A new conductive polymer for tantalum polymer capacitors was presented by Kemet at the 1999 Carts conference 41 This capacitor used the newly developed organic conductive polymer PEDT Poly 3 4 ethylenedioxythiophene also known as PEDOT trade name Baytron 42 Niobium capacitors edit Main article Niobium capacitor Another price explosion for tantalum in 2000 2001 forced the development of niobium electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte which have been available since 2002 43 44 Niobium is a sister metal to tantalum and serves as valve metal generating an oxide layer during anodic oxidation Niobium as raw material is much more abundant in nature than tantalum and is less expensive It was a question of the availability of the base metal in the late 1960s which led to development and implementation of niobium electrolytic capacitors in the former Soviet Union instead of tantalum capacitors as in the West The materials and processes used to produce niobium dielectric capacitors are essentially the same as for existing tantalum dielectric capacitors The characteristics of niobium electrolytic capacitors and tantalum electrolytic capacitors are roughly comparable 45 Water based electrolytes edit With the goal of reducing ESR for inexpensive non solid electrolytic capacitors from the mid 1980s in Japan new water based electrolytes for aluminum electrolytic capacitors were developed Water is inexpensive an effective solvent for electrolytes and significantly improves the conductivity of the electrolyte The Japanese manufacturer Rubycon was a leader in the development of new water based electrolyte systems with enhanced conductivity in the late 1990s 46 The new series of non solid electrolytic capacitors with water based electrolyte was described in the data sheets as having low ESR low impedance ultra low impedance or high ripple current From 1999 through at least 2010 a stolen recipe for such a water based electrolyte in which important stabilizers 47 48 were absent 49 led to the widespread problem of bad caps failing electrolytic capacitors leaking or occasionally bursting in computers power supplies and other electronic equipment which became known as the capacitor plague In these electrolytic capacitors the water reacts quite aggressively with aluminum accompanied by strong heat and gas development in the capacitor resulting in premature equipment failure and development of a cottage repair industry Electrical characteristics editSeries equivalent circuit edit nbsp Series equivalent circuit model of an electrolytic capacitorThe electrical characteristics of capacitors are harmonized by the international generic specification IEC 60384 1 In this standard the electrical characteristics of capacitors are described by an idealized series equivalent circuit with electrical components which model all ohmic losses capacitive and inductive parameters of an electrolytic capacitor C the capacitance of the capacitor RESR the equivalent series resistance which summarizes all ohmic losses of the capacitor usually abbreviated as ESR LESL the equivalent series inductance which is the effective self inductance of the capacitor usually abbreviated as ESL Rleak the resistance representing the leakage current of the capacitorCapacitance standard values and tolerances edit nbsp Typical capacitance as a function of frequency nbsp Typical capacitance as a function of temperatureThe electrical characteristics of electrolytic capacitors depend on the structure of the anode and the electrolyte used This influences the capacitance value of electrolytic capacitors which depends on measuring frequency and temperature Electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolytes show a broader aberration over frequency and temperature ranges than do capacitors with solid electrolytes The basic unit of an electrolytic capacitor s capacitance is the microfarad mF The capacitance value specified in the data sheets of the manufacturers is called the rated capacitance CR or nominal capacitance CN and is the value for which the capacitor has been designed The standardized measuring condition for electrolytic capacitors is an AC measuring method with 0 5 V at a frequency of 100 120 Hz at a temperature of 20 C For tantalum capacitors a DC bias voltage of 1 1 to 1 5 V for types with a rated voltage 2 5 V or 2 1 to 2 5 V for types with a rated voltage of gt 2 5 V may be applied during the measurement to avoid reverse voltage The capacitance value measured at the frequency of 1 kHz is about 10 less than the 100 120 Hz value Therefore the capacitance values of electrolytic capacitors are not directly comparable and differ from those of film capacitors or ceramic capacitors whose capacitance is measured at 1 kHz or higher Measured with an AC measuring method at 100 120 Hz the capacitance value is the closest value to the electrical charge stored in the e caps The stored charge is measured with a special discharge method and is called the DC capacitance The DC capacitance is about 10 higher than the 100 120 Hz AC capacitance The DC capacitance is of interest for discharge applications like photoflash The percentage of allowed deviation of the measured capacitance from the rated value is called the capacitance tolerance Electrolytic capacitors are available in different tolerance series whose values are specified in the E series specified in IEC 60063 For abbreviated marking in tight spaces a letter code for each tolerance is specified in IEC 60062 rated capacitance series E3 tolerance 20 letter code M rated capacitance series E6 tolerance 20 letter code M rated capacitance series E12 tolerance 10 letter code K The required capacitance tolerance is determined by the particular application Electrolytic capacitors which are often used for filtering and bypassing do not have the need for narrow tolerances because they are mostly not used for accurate frequency applications like in oscillators Rated and category voltage edit nbsp Relation between rated and category voltage and rated and category temperatureReferring to the IEC EN 60384 1 standard the allowed operating voltage for electrolytic capacitors is called the rated voltage UR or nominal voltage UN The rated voltage UR is the maximum DC voltage or peak pulse voltage that may be applied continuously at any temperature within the rated temperature range TR The voltage proof of electrolytic capacitors decreases with increasing temperature For some applications it is important to use a higher temperature range Lowering the voltage applied at a higher temperature maintains safety margins For some capacitor types therefore the IEC standard specifies a temperature derated voltage for a higher temperature the category voltage UC The category voltage is the maximum DC voltage or peak pulse voltage that may be applied continuously to a capacitor at any temperature within the category temperature range TC The relation between both voltages and temperatures is given in the picture at right Applying a higher voltage than specified may destroy electrolytic capacitors Applying a lower voltage may have a positive influence on electrolytic capacitors For aluminum electrolytic capacitors a lower applied voltage can in some cases extend the lifetime 5 For tantalum electrolytic capacitors lowering the voltage applied increases the reliability and reduces the expected failure rate 50 I Surge voltage edit The surge voltage indicates the maximum peak voltage value that may be applied to electrolytic capacitors during their application for a limited number of cycles 5 The surge voltage is standardized in IEC EN 60384 1 For aluminum electrolytic capacitors with a rated voltage of up to 315 V the surge voltage is 1 15 times the rated voltage and for capacitors with a rated voltage exceeding 315 V the surge voltage is 1 10 times the rated voltage For tantalum electrolytic capacitors the surge voltage can be 1 3 times the rated voltage rounded off to the nearest volt The surge voltage applied to tantalum capacitors may influence the capacitor s failure rate 51 52 Transient voltage edit Aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolyte are relatively insensitive to high and short term transient voltages higher than surge voltage if the frequency and the energy content of the transients are low This ability depends on rated voltage and component size Low energy transient voltages lead to a voltage limitation similar to a zener diode 53 An unambiguous and general specification of tolerable transients or peak voltages is not possible In every case transients arise the application has to be approved very carefully Electrolytic capacitors with solid manganese oxide or polymer electrolyte and aluminum as well as tantalum electrolytic capacitors cannot withstand transients or peak voltages higher than the surge voltage Transients may destroy this type of electrolytic capacitor 51 52 Reverse voltage edit nbsp An exploded aluminum electrolytic capacitor on a PCB nbsp An electrolytic capacitor that has exploded via the vent port on the top showing the internal dielectric material that was forced out Standard electrolytic capacitors and aluminum as well as tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors are polarized and generally require the anode electrode voltage to be positive relative to the cathode voltage Nevertheless electrolytic capacitors can withstand for short instants a reverse voltage for a limited number of cycles Specifically aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolyte can withstand a reverse voltage of about 1 V to 1 5 V This reverse voltage should never be used to determine the maximum reverse voltage under which a capacitor can be used permanently 54 55 56 Solid tantalum capacitors can also withstand reverse voltages for short periods The most common guidelines for tantalum reverse voltage are 10 of rated voltage to a maximum of 1 V at 25 C 3 of rated voltage to a maximum of 0 5 V at 85 C 1 of rated voltage to a maximum of 0 1 V at 125 C These guidelines apply for short excursion and should never be used to determine the maximum reverse voltage under which a capacitor can be used permanently 57 58 But in no case for aluminum as well as for tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors may a reverse voltage be used for a permanent AC application To minimize the likelihood of a polarized electrolytic being incorrectly inserted into a circuit polarity has to be very clearly indicated on the case see the section on polarity marking below Special bipolar aluminum electrolytic capacitors designed for bipolar operation are available and usually referred to as non polarized or bipolar types In these the capacitors have two anode foils with full thickness oxide layers connected in reverse polarity On the alternate halves of the AC cycles one of the oxides on the foil acts as a blocking dielectric preventing reverse current from damaging the electrolyte of the other one But these bipolar electrolytic capacitors are not suitable for main AC applications instead of power capacitors with metallized polymer film or paper dielectric Impedance edit nbsp Simplified series equivalent circuit of a capacitor for higher frequencies above vector diagram with electrical reactances XESL and XC and resistance ESR and for illustration the impedance Z and dissipation factor tan dIn general a capacitor is seen as a storage component for electric energy But this is only one capacitor application A capacitor can also act as an AC resistor Aluminum electrolytic capacitors in particular are often used as decoupling capacitors to filter or bypass undesired AC frequencies to ground or for capacitive coupling of audio AC signals Then the dielectric is used only for blocking DC For such applications the impedance AC resistance is as important as the capacitance value nbsp Typical impedance curves for different capacitance values over frequency The higher the capacitance the lower the resonant frequency The impedance Z is the vector sum of reactance and resistance it describes the phase difference and the ratio of amplitudes between sinusoidally varying voltage and sinusoidally varying current at a given frequency In this sense impedance is a measure of the ability of the capacitor to pass alternating currents and can be used like Ohm s law Z u i U e f f I e f f displaystyle Z frac hat u hat imath frac U mathrm eff I mathrm eff nbsp In other words impedance is a frequency dependent AC resistance and possesses both magnitude and phase at a particular frequency In data sheets of electrolytic capacitors only the impedance magnitude Z is specified and simply written as Z Regarding the IEC EN 60384 1 standard the impedance values of electrolytic capacitors are measured and specified at 10 kHz or 100 kHz depending on the capacitance and voltage of the capacitor Besides measuring the impedance can be calculated using the idealized components of a capacitor s series equivalent circuit including an ideal capacitor C a resistor ESR and an inductance ESL In this case the impedance at the angular frequency w is given by the geometric complex addition of ESR by a capacitive reactance XC X C 1 w C displaystyle X C frac 1 omega C nbsp and by an inductive reactance XL Inductance X L w L E S L displaystyle X L omega L mathrm ESL nbsp Then Z is given by Z E S R 2 X C X L 2 displaystyle Z sqrt ESR 2 X mathrm C X mathrm L 2 nbsp In the special case of resonance in which the both reactive resistances XC and XL have the same value XC XL then the impedance will only be determined by ESR With frequencies above the resonance frequency the impedance increases again because of the ESL of the capacitor The capacitor becomes an inductor ESR and dissipation factor tan d edit Typical impedance and ESR curves as a function of frequency and temperature nbsp Typical impedance and ESR as a function of frequency nbsp Typical impedance as a function of temperatureThe equivalent series resistance ESR summarizes all resistive losses of the capacitor These are the terminal resistances the contact resistance of the electrode contact the line resistance of the electrodes the electrolyte resistance and the dielectric losses in the dielectric oxide layer 59 For electrolytic capacitors ESR generally decreases with increasing frequency and temperature 60 ESR influences the superimposed AC ripple after smoothing and may influence the circuit functionality Within the capacitor ESR accounts for internal heat generation if a ripple current flows across the capacitor This internal heat reduces the lifetime of non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors and affects the reliability of solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors For electrolytic capacitors for historical reasons the dissipation factor tan d will sometimes be specified in the data sheet instead of the ESR The dissipation factor is determined by the tangent of the phase angle between the capacitive reactance XC minus the inductive reactance XL and the ESR If the inductance ESL is small the dissipation factor can be approximated as tan d ESR w C displaystyle tan delta mbox ESR cdot omega C nbsp The dissipation factor is used for capacitors with very low losses in frequency determining circuits where the reciprocal value of the dissipation factor is called the quality factor Q which represents a resonator s bandwidth Ripple current edit nbsp The high ripple current across the smoothing capacitor C1 in a power supply with half wave rectification causes significant internal heat generation corresponding to the capacitor s ESR Ripple current is the RMS value of a superimposed AC current of any frequency and any waveform of the current curve for continuous operation within the specified temperature range It arises mainly in power supplies including switched mode power supplies after rectifying an AC voltage and flows as charge and discharge current through any decoupling and smoothing capacitors Ripple currents generate heat inside the capacitor body This dissipation power loss PL is caused by ESR and is the squared value of the effective RMS ripple current IR P L I R 2 E S R displaystyle P L I R 2 cdot ESR nbsp This internally generated heat additional to the ambient temperature and possibly other external heat sources leads to a capacitor body temperature having a temperature difference of D T relative to ambient This heat has to be distributed as thermal losses Pth over the capacitor s surface A and the thermal resistance b to ambient P t h D T A b displaystyle P th Delta T cdot A cdot beta nbsp The internally generated heat has to be distributed to ambient by thermal radiation convection and thermal conduction The temperature of the capacitor which is the net difference between heat produced and heat dissipated must not exceed the capacitor s maximum specified temperature The ripple current is specified as an effective RMS value at 100 or 120 Hz or at 10 kHz at upper category temperature Non sinusoidal ripple currents have to be analyzed and separated into their single sinusoidal frequencies by means of Fourier analysis and summarized by squared addition the single currents 61 I R i 1 2 i 2 2 i 3 2 i n 2 displaystyle I R sqrt i 1 2 i 2 2 i 3 2 i n 2 nbsp In non solid electrolytic capacitors the heat generated by the ripple current causes the evaporation of electrolytes shortening the lifetime of the capacitors 62 63 64 65 66 Exceeding the limit tends to result in explosive failure In solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte the heat generated by the ripple current affects the reliability of the capacitors 67 68 69 70 Exceeding the limit tends to result in catastrophic failure failing short circuit with visible burning The heat generated by the ripple current also affects the lifetime of aluminum and tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid polymer electrolytes 71 Exceeding the limit tends to result in catastrophic failure failing short circuit Current surge peak or pulse current edit Aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolytes normally can be charged up to the rated voltage without any current surge peak or pulse limitation This property is a result of the limited ion movability in the liquid electrolyte which slows down the voltage ramp across the dielectric and of the capacitor s ESR Only the frequency of peaks integrated over time must not exceed the maximal specified ripple current Solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte or polymer electrolyte are damaged by peak or pulse currents 51 52 Solid Tantalum capacitors which are exposed to surge peak or pulse currents for example in highly inductive circuits should be used with a voltage derating If possible the voltage profile should be a ramp turn on as this reduces the peak current experienced by the capacitor Leakage current edit nbsp general leakage behavior of electrolytic capacitors leakage current I l e a k displaystyle I leak nbsp as a function of time t displaystyle t nbsp for different kinds of electrolytes non solid high water content non solid organic solid polymerFor electrolytic capacitors DC leakage current DCL is a special characteristic that other conventional capacitors do not have This current is represented by the resistor Rleak in parallel with the capacitor in the series equivalent circuit of electrolytic capacitors The reasons for leakage current are different between electrolytic capacitors with non solid and with solid electrolyte or more common for wet aluminum and for solid tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide electrolyte as well as for electrolytic capacitors with polymer electrolytes For non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors the leakage current includes all weakened imperfections of the dielectric caused by unwanted chemical processes taking place during the time without applied voltage storage time between operating cycles These unwanted chemical processes depend on the kind of electrolyte Water based electrolytes are more aggressive to the aluminum oxide layer than are electrolytes based on organic liquids This is why different electrolytic capacitor series specify different storage time without reforming 72 Applying a positive voltage to a wet capacitor causes a reforming self healing process which repairs all weakened dielectric layers and the leakage current remain at a low level 73 Although the leakage current of non solid electrolytic capacitors is higher than current flow across the dielectric in ceramic or film capacitors self discharge of modern non solid electrolytic capacitors with organic electrolytes takes several weeks The main causes of DCL for solid tantalum capacitors include electrical breakdown of the dielectric conductive paths due to impurities or poor anodization and bypassing of dielectric due to excess manganese dioxide to moisture paths or to cathode conductors carbon silver 74 This normal leakage current in solid electrolyte capacitors cannot be reduced by healing because under normal conditions solid electrolytes cannot provide oxygen for forming processes This statement should not be confused with the self healing process during field crystallization see below Reliability Failure rate The specification of the leakage current in data sheets is often given as multiplication of the rated capacitance value CR with the value of the rated voltage UR together with an addendum figure measured after a measuring time of two or five minutes for example I L e a k 0 01 A V F U R C R 3 m A displaystyle I mathrm Leak 0 01 mathrm A over V cdot F cdot U mathrm R cdot C mathrm R 3 mathrm mu A nbsp The leakage current value depends on the voltage applied on the temperature of the capacitor and on measuring time Leakage current in solid MnO2 tantalum electrolytic capacitors generally drops very much faster than for non solid electrolytic capacitors but remain at the level reached Dielectric absorption soakage edit Main article Dielectric absorption Dielectric absorption occurs when a capacitor that has remained charged for a long time discharges only incompletely when briefly discharged Although an ideal capacitor would reach zero volts after discharge real capacitors develop a small voltage from time delayed dipole discharging a phenomenon that is also called dielectric relaxation soakage or battery action Values of dielectric absorption for some often used capacitors Type of capacitor Dielectric absorptionTantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte 2 to 3 75 10 76 Aluminium electrolytic capacitor with non solid electrolyte 10 to 15 77 Dielectric absorption may be a problem in circuits where very small currents are used in the function of an electronic circuit such as long time constant integrators or sample and hold circuits 78 In most electrolytic capacitor applications supporting power supply lines dielectric absorption is not a problem But especially for electrolytic capacitors with high rated voltage the voltage at the terminals generated by the dielectric absorption can pose a safety risk to personnel or circuits In order to prevent shocks most very large capacitors are shipped with shorting wires that need to be removed before the capacitors are used 79 Operational characteristics editReliability failure rate edit nbsp Bathtub curve with times of early failures random failures and wear out failures The time of random failures is the time of constant failure rate and corresponds with the lifetime of non solid e caps The reliability of a component is a property that indicates how reliably this component performs its function in a time interval It is subject to a stochastic process and can be described qualitatively and quantitatively it is not directly measurable The reliability of electrolytic capacitors is empirically determined by identifying the failure rate in production accompanying endurance tests see Reliability engineering Reliability normally is shown as a bathtub curve and is divided into three areas early failures or infant mortality failures constant random failures and wear out failures Failures totalized in a failure rate are short circuit open circuit and degradation failures exceeding electrical parameters The reliability prediction is generally expressed in a failure rate l abbreviated FIT Failures In Time This is the number of failures that can be expected in one billion 109 component hours of operation e g 1000 components for 1 million hours or 1 million components for 1000 hours which is 1 ppm 1000 hours at fixed working conditions during the period of constant random failures This failure rate model implicitly assumes the idea of random failure Individual components fail at random times but at a predictable rate Billions of tested capacitor unit hours would be needed to establish failure rates in the very low level range which are required today to ensure the production of large quantities of components without failures This requires about a million units over a long time period which means a large staff and considerable financing 80 The tested failure rates are often complemented with figures resulting from feedback from the field from major customers field failure rate which mostly results in a lower failure rate than tested The reciprocal value of FIT is Mean Time Between Failures MTBF The standard operating conditions for FIT testing are 40 C and 0 5 UR For other conditions of applied voltage current load temperature capacitance value circuit resistance for tantalum capacitors mechanical influences and humidity the FIT figure can be converted with acceleration factors standardized for industrial 81 or military 82 applications The higher the temperature and applied voltage the higher the failure rate for example The most often cited source for failure rate conversion is MIL HDBK 217F the bible of failure rate calculations for electronic components SQC Online the online statistical calculator for acceptance sampling and quality control provides an online tool for short examination to calculate given failure rate values for given application conditions 83 Some manufacturers may have their own FIT calculation tables for tantalum capacitors 84 85 or for aluminum capacitors 86 For tantalum capacitors the failure rate is often specified at 85 C and rated voltage UR as reference conditions and expressed as percent failed components per thousand hours n 1000 h That is n number of failed components per 105 hours or in FIT the ten thousand fold value per 109 hours Tantalum capacitors are now very reliable components Continuous improvement in tantalum powder and capacitor technologies have resulted in a significant reduction in the amount of impurities which formerly caused most field crystallization failures Commercially available industrially produced tantalum capacitors now have reached as standard products the high MIL standard C level which is 0 01 1000 h at 85 C and UR or 1 failure per 107 hours at 85 C and UR 87 Converted to FIT with the acceleration factors coming from MIL HDKB 217F at 40 C and 0 5 UR is the failure rate For a 100 µF 25 V tantalum chip capacitor used with a series resistance of 0 1 W the failure rate is 0 02 FIT Aluminum electrolytic capacitors do not use a specification in per 1000 h at 85 C and UR They use the FIT specification with 40 C and 0 5 UR as reference conditions Aluminum electrolytic capacitors are very reliable components Published figures show for low voltage types 6 3 160 V FIT rates in the range of 1 to 20 FIT 88 and for high voltage types gt 160 550 V FIT rates in the range of 20 to 200 FIT 86 Field failure rates for aluminum e caps are in the range of 0 5 to 20 FIT 86 88 89 The published figures show that both tantalum and aluminum capacitor types are reliable components comparable with other electronic components and achieving safe operation for decades under normal conditions But a great difference exists in the case of wear out failures Electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolyte have a limited period of constant random failures up to the point when wear out failures begin The constant random failure rate period corresponds to the lifetime or service life of wet aluminum electrolytic capacitors Lifetime edit nbsp The electrical values of aluminum electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolyte change over time because the electrolyte evaporates Reaching the specified limits of the electrical parameters the period of the constant failure rate ends signifying the end of the capacitor s lifetime The graph shows this behavior in a 2000 h endurance test at 105 C The lifetime service life load life or useful life of electrolytic capacitors is a special characteristic of non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors whose liquid electrolyte can evaporate over time Lowering the electrolyte level affects the electrical parameters of the capacitors The capacitance decreases and the impedance and ESR increase with decreasing amounts of electrolyte This very slow electrolyte drying out depends on the temperature the applied ripple current load and the applied voltage The lower these parameters compared to their maximum values the longer the capacitor s life The end of life point is defined by the appearance of wear out failures or degradation failures when either capacitance impedance ESR or leakage current exceed their specified change limits The lifetime is a specification of a collection of tested capacitors and delivers an expectation of the behavior of similar types This lifetime definition corresponds to the time of the constant random failure rate in the bathtub curve But even after exceeding the specified limits and the capacitors having reached their end of life the electronic circuit is not in immediate danger only the functionality of the capacitors is reduced With today s high levels of purity in the manufacture of electrolytic capacitors it is not to be expected that short circuits occur after the end of life point with progressive evaporation combined with parameter degradation The lifetime of non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors is specified in terms of hours per temperature like 2 000h 105 C With this specification the lifetime at operational conditions can be estimated by special formulas or graphs specified in the data sheets of serious manufacturers They use different ways for specification some give special formulas 90 91 others specify their e caps lifetime calculation with graphs that consider the influence of applied voltage 88 92 93 94 The basic principle for calculating the time under operational conditions is the so called 10 degree rule 95 96 97 This rule is also known as the Arrhenius rule It characterizes the change of thermic reaction speed For every 10 C lower temperature the evaporation is reduced by half That means for every 10 C reduction in temperature the lifetime of capacitors doubles If a lifetime specification of an electrolytic capacitor is for example 2000 h 105 C the capacitor s lifetime at 45 C can be calculated as 128 000 hours that is roughly 15 years by using the 10 degrees rule However solid polymer electrolytic capacitors and aluminum tantalum and niobium electrolytic capacitors also have a lifetime specification The polymer electrolyte exhibits a small deterioration of conductivity caused by thermal degradation of the conductive polymer The electrical conductivity decreases as a function of time in agreement with a granular metal type structure in which aging is due to the shrinking of the conductive polymer grains 98 The lifetime of polymer electrolytic capacitors is specified in terms similar to non solid electrolytic capacitors but its lifetime calculation follows other rules leading to much longer operational lifetimes 99 100 101 Tantalum electrolytic capacitors with solid manganese dioxide electrolyte do not have wear out failures so they do not have a lifetime specification in the sense of non solid aluminum electrolytic capacitors Also tantalum capacitors with non solid electrolyte the wet tantalums do not have a lifetime specification because they are hermetically sealed Failure modes self healing mechanism and application rules edit The many different types of electrolytic capacitors exhibit different electrical long term behavior intrinsic failure modes and self healing mechanisms Application rules for types with an intrinsic failure mode are specified to ensure capacitors with high reliability and long life Long term electrical behavior failure modes self healing mechanism and application rules of the different types of electrolytic capacitors Type of electrolytic capacitors Long term electrical behavior Failure modes Self healing mechanism Application rulesAluminum electrolytic capacitors non solid electrolyte Drying out over time capacitance decreases ESR increases no unique determinable New generated oxide forming by applying a voltage LifetimecalculationAluminum electrolytic capacitors solid polymer electrolyte Deterioration of conductivity ESR increases no unique determinable Insulating of faults in the dielectric by oxidation or evaporation of the polymer electrolyte LifetimecalculationTantalum electrolytic capacitors solid MnO2 electrolyte Stable Field crystallization 87 102 Thermally induced insulating of faults in the dielectric by oxidization of the electrolyte MnO2 into insulating MnO2O3 if current availability is limited Voltage derating 50 Series resistance 3 W V 103 104 Tantalum electrolytic capacitors solid polymer electrolyte Deterioration of conductivity ESR increases Field crystallization 87 102 Insulating of faults in the dielectric by oxidation or evaporation of the polymer electrolyte Voltage derating 20 103 104 Niobium electrolytic capacitors solid MnO2 electrolyte Stable no unique determinable Thermally induced insulation of faults in the dielectric by oxidation of Nb2O5 into insulating NbO2 Niobium anode voltage derating 50 Niobium oxide anode voltage derating 20 103 104 Niobium electrolytic capacitors solid polymer electrolyte Deterioration of conductivity ESR increases no unique determinable Insulating of faults in the dielectric by oxidation or evaporation of the polymer electrolyte Niobium anode voltage derating 50 Niobium oxide anode voltage derating 20 103 104 Hybrid aluminum electrolytic capacitors solid polymer non solid electrolyte Deterioration of conductivity drying out over time capacitance decreases ESR increases no unique determinable New generated oxide forming by applying a voltage LifetimecalculationPerformance after storage edit All electrolytic capacitors are aged during manufacturing by applying the rated voltage at high temperature for a sufficient time to repair all cracks and weaknesses that may have occurred during production However a particular problem with non solid aluminum models may occur after storage or unpowered periods Chemical processes corrosion can weaken the oxide layer which may lead to a higher leakage current Most modern electrolytic systems are chemically inert and do not exhibit corrosion problems even after storage times of two years or longer Non solid electrolytic capacitors using organic solvents like GBL as electrolyte do not have problems with high leakage current after prolonged storage 73 They can be stored for up to 10 years without problems 61 Storage times can be tested using accelerated shelf life testing which requires storage without applied voltage at the upper category temperature for a certain period usually 1000 hours This shelf life test is a good indicator for chemical stability and of the oxide layer because all chemical reactions are accelerated by higher temperatures Nearly all commercial series of non solid electrolytic capacitors fulfill the 1000 hour shelf life test However many series are specified only for two years of storage This also ensures solderability of the terminals For antique radio equipment or for electrolytic capacitors built in the 1970s or earlier preconditioning may be appropriate This is performed by applying the rated voltage to the capacitor via a series resistor of approximately 1 kW for one hour allowing the oxide layer to repair itself through self healing Capacitors that fail leakage current requirements after preconditioning may have experienced mechanical damage 94 Electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolytes do not have preconditioning requirements Additional information editCapacitor symbols edit Electrolytic capacitor symbols nbsp Electrolytic capacitor nbsp Electrolytic capacitor nbsp Electrolytic capacitor nbsp Bipolar electrolytic capacitorParallel connection edit If an individual capacitor within a bank of parallel capacitors develops a short the entire energy of the capacitor bank discharges through that short Thus large capacitors particularly high voltage types should be individually protected against sudden discharge Series connection edit In applications where high withstanding voltages are needed electrolytic capacitors can be connected in series Because of individual variation in insulation resistance and thus the leakage current when voltage is applied the voltage is not distributed evenly across each series capacitor This can result in the voltage rating of an individual capacitor being exceeded A passive or active balancer circuit must be provided in order to equalize the voltage across each individual capacitor 61 94 Polarity marking edit Polarity markings for aluminum electrolytic capacitors nbsp Electrolytic capacitors with non solid electrolyte have a polarity marking on the cathode minus side with a shorter lead nbsp Electrolytic capacitors with solid electrolyte have a polarity marking on the anode plus side except for cylindrical leaded single ended and SMD polymer capacitors 105 Polarity marking for polymer electrolytic capacitors nbsp nbsp Rectangular polymer capacitors tantalum as well as aluminum have a polarity marking on the anode plus side Cylindrical polymer capacitors have a polarity marking on the cathode minus sideImprinted markings edit Electrolytic capacitors like most other electronic components are marked space permitting with manufacturer s name or trademark manufacturer s type designation polarity of the terminations for polarized capacitors rated capacitance tolerance on rated capacitance rated voltage and nature of supply AC or DC climatic category or rated temperature year and month or week of manufacture certification marks of safety standards for safety EMI RFI suppression capacitors Smaller capacitors use a shorthand notation The most commonly used format is XYZ J K M V where XYZ represents the capacitance calculated as XY 10Z pF the letters K or M indicate the tolerance 10 and 20 respectively and V represents the working voltage Examples 105K 330V implies a capacitance of 10 105 pF 1 µF K 10 with a rated voltage of 330 V 476M 100V implies a capacitance of 47 106 pF 47 µF M 20 with a rated voltage of 100 V Capacitance tolerance and date of manufacture can be indicated with a short code specified in IEC EN 60062 Examples of short marking of the rated capacitance microfarads µ47 0 47 µF 4µ7 4 7 µF 47µ 47 µFThe date of manufacture is often printed according to international standards Version 1 coding with year week numeral code 1208 is 2012 week number 8 Version 2 coding with year code month code The year codes are R 2003 S 2004 T 2005 U 2006 V 2007 W 2008 X 2009 A 2010 B 2011 C 2012 D 2013 E 2014 etc Month codes are 1 to 9 Jan to Sept O October N November D December X5 is then 2009 May For very small capacitors no marking is possible Here only the traceability of the manufacturers can ensure the identification of a type Standardization edit The standardization for all electrical electronic components and related technologies follows the rules given by the International Electrotechnical Commission IEC 106 a non profit non governmental international standards organization 107 108 The definition of the characteristics and the procedure of the test methods for capacitors for use in electronic equipment are set out in the Generic specification IEC EN 60384 1 Fixed capacitors for use in electronic equipmentThe tests and requirements to be met by aluminum and tantalum electrolytic capacitors for use in electronic equipment for approval as standardized types are set out in the following sectional specifications IEC EN 60384 3 Surface mount fixed tantalum electrolytic capacitors with manganese dioxide solid electrolyte IEC EN 60384 4 Aluminium electrolytic capacitors with solid MnO2 and non solid electrolyte IEC EN 60384 15 Fixed tantalum capacitors with non solid and solid electrolyte IEC EN 60384 18 Fixed aluminium electrolytic surface mount capacitors with solid MnO2 and non solid electrolyte IEC EN 60384 24 Surface mount fixed tantalum electrolytic capacitors with conductive polymer solid electrolyte IEC EN 60384 25 Surface mount fixed aluminium electrolytic capacitors with conductive polymer solid electrolyte IEC EN 60384 26 Fixed aluminium electrolytic capacitors with conductive polymer solid electrolyteMarket edit The market for electrolytic capacitors in 2008 was roughly 30 of the total market in value Aluminum electrolytic capacitors US 3 9 billion 22 Tantalum electrolytic capacitors US 2 2 billion 12 In number of pieces these capacitors cover about 10 of the total capacitor market or about 100 to 120 billion pieces 109 Manufacturers and products edit Worldwide operating manufacturers and their electrolytic capacitor product program Manufacturer Aluminum electrolytic capacitors Tantalum electrolytic capacitors Niobium electrolytic capacitorsSMDRadial PowerSI ST PolymerSMDRadial PolymerHybrid SMDMnO2 SMDPolymer Wetelectrolyte SMD MnO2PolymerAVX X X X XCapXon X X X X CDE Cornell Dubilier X X X X X X Capacitor Industries X Chinsan Elite X X X Daewoo Partsnic Archived 2018 06 12 at the Wayback Machine X X Elna Archived 2015 03 14 at the Wayback Machine X X X Exxelia group X X X Frolyt X X Hitachi X Hitano X X X X Itelcond X Jackcon X X Jianghai X X X X Kaimei Electronic Corp Jamicon X X KEMET Archived 2013 12 12 at the Wayback Machine X X X X X X Lelon X X X MAN YUE Samxon X X NEC Tokin X X Nippon Chemi Con X X X X NIC X X X X X X Nichicon Archived 2018 06 12 at the Wayback Machine X X X Panasonic Matsushita X X X X X Richey X X ROHM X X Rubycon X X X Samwha X X X SUN Electronic Industry X X TDK EPCOS X X Teapo Luxon Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine X X X Vishay X X X X X X XYageo X X X Date of the table March 2015See also editE series of preferred numbers List of capacitor manufacturers Types of capacitorReferences edit J L Stevens A C Geiculescu T F Strange Dielectric Aluminum Oxides Nano Structural Features and Composites PDF Archived 2014 12 29 at the Wayback Machine T Karnik AVX NIOBIUM OXIDE FOR CAPACITOR MANUFACTURING METAL 2008 13 15 5 2008 PDF Jeng Kuei Chang Chia Mei Lin Chi Min Liao Chih Hsiung Chen Wen Ta Tsai Journal of the Electrochemical Society 2004 Effect of Heat Treatment on Characteristics of Anodized Aluminum Oxide Formed in Ammonium Adipate Solution 1 Archived 2021 02 25 at the Wayback Machine DOI 10 1149 1 1646140 Th F Strange T R Marshall Very high volt oxide formation of aluminum for electrolytic capacitors US Patent 6299752 B1 9 Okt 2001 2 a b c d A Albertsen Jianghai Europe Keep your distance Voltage Proof of Electrolytic Capacitors PDF Archived 2013 01 08 at the Wayback Machine a b KDK Specifications for Etched Foil for Anode Low Voltage PDF I Horacek T Zednicek S Zednicek T Karnik J Petrzilek P Jacisko P Gregorova AVX High CV Tantalum Capacitors Challenges and Limitations 3 Archived 2014 03 09 at the Wayback Machine See Runge Jude Mary 2018 The Metallurgy of Anodizing Aluminum Connecting Science to Practice Cham Switzerland Springer International Publishing AG p 196 ISBN 9783319721774 Wilson E 1898 Aluminium as an electrode in cells for direct and alternate currents Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 63 389 400 329 347 Bibcode 1898RSPS 63 329W doi 10 1098 rspl 1898 0040 S2CID 98508421 see p 329 Buff H 1857 Ueber das electrische Verhalten des Aluminiums On the electrical behaviour of aluminium Annalen der Chemie und Pharmacie in German 102 3 265 284 doi 10 1002 jlac 18571020302 See Ducretet E 1875 Note sur un rheotome liquide a direction constante fonde sur une propriete nouvelle de l aluminium Note on a liquid rheotome with a constant direction based on a new property of aluminum Journal de Physique in French 4 84 85 Ducretet E 1875 Note relative a la resistance electro chimique offerte par l aluminium employe comme electrode positive dans un voltametre Note regarding electrochemical resistance offered by aluminum used as a positive electrode in a voltmeter Comptes Rendus in French 80 280 Pollack Charles Elektrischer Flussigkeitskondesator mit Aluminiumelektroden Electrical liquid condenser i e capacitor with aluminium electrodes D R P 92564 filed 14 January 1896 granted 19 May 1897 Both Jens January February 2015 Electrolytic capacitors 1890 to 1925 early history and basic principle IEEE Electrical Insulation Magazine 31 1 22 29 doi 10 1109 MEI 2015 6996675 S2CID 24224453 US Patent Nr 1774455 Electric condenser filed October 19 1925 granted August 26 1930 Samuel Ruben Inventor Scholar and Benefactor by Kathryn R Bullock PDF www electrochem org a b c P McK Deeley Electrolytic Capacitors The Cornell Dubilier Electric Corp South Plainfield New Jersey 1938 Elektrolytischer Kondensator mit aufgerollten Metallbandern als Belegungen Alfred Eckel Hydra Werke Berlin Charlottenburg DRP 498 794 filed May 12 1927 granted May 8 1930 William Dubilier Electric Condenser US Patent 468787 Henry B O Davis 1983 Electrical and Electronic Technologies A Chronology of Events and Inventors from 1900 to 1940 p 111 The Mershon Company put electrolytic capacitors on the market The capacitors packed a high capacitance in a very small space compared to existing paper capacitors Philips Data Handbook PA01 1986 the first 125 C series 118 AHT J Both The modern era of aluminum electrolytic capacitors Electrical Insulation Magazine IEEE Volume 31 Issue 4 July August 2015 ieeexplore ieee org D F Tailor Tantalum and Tantalum Compounds Fansteel Inc Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology Vol 19 2nd ed 1969 John Wiley amp sons Inc R L Taylor and H E Haring A metal semi conductor capacitor J Electrochem Soc vol 103 p 611 November 1956 E K Reed Jet Propulsion Laboratory Characterization of Tantalum Polymer Capacitors NEPP Task 1 21 5 Phase 1 FY05 D A McLean F S Power Proc Inst Radio Engrs 44 1956 872 Preston Robinson Sprague US Patent 3066247 25 Aug 1954 27 Nov 1962 Sprague Dr Preston Robinson Granted 103rd Patent Since Joining Company In 1929 4 permanent dead link A Fraioli Recent Advances in the Solid State Electrolytic Capacitor IRE Transactions on Component Parts June 1958 R J Millard Sprague US Patent 2936514 October 24 1955 May 17 1960 W Serjak H Seyeda Ch Cymorek Tantalum Availability 2000 and Beyond PCI March April 2002 5 Archived 2014 08 08 at the Wayback Machine The Tantalum Supply Chain A Detailed Analysis PCI March April 2002 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 08 08 Retrieved 2015 01 02 J Both Valvo SAL contra Tantal Zuverlassige Technologien im Wettstreit nachrichten elektronik 35 1981 Homepage www computerposter ch K Lischka Spiegel 27 09 2007 40 Jahre Elektro Addierer Der erste Taschenrechner wog 1 5 Kilo 6 Larry E Mosley Intel Corporation Capacitor Impedance Needs For Future Microprocessors CARTS USA 2006 ecadigitallibrary com Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Niwa Shinichi Taketani Yutaka 1996 Development of new series of aluminium solid capacitors with organic semiconductive electrolyte OS CON Journal of Power Sources 60 2 165 171 Bibcode 1996JPS 60 165N doi 10 1016 S0378 7753 96 80006 1 Kuch Investigation of charge transfer complexes TCNQ TTF PDF Sanyo OS CON Technical Book Ver 15 2007 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 12 14 Retrieved 2014 12 14 About the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2000 Advanced Information October 10 2000 7 Y K ZHANG J LIN Y CHEN Polymer Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors with Chemically Polymerized Polypyrrole PPy as Cathode Materials Part I Effect of Monomer Concentration and Oxidant on Electrical Properties of the Capacitors PDF Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine U Merker K Wussow W Lovenich H C Starck GmbH New Conducting Polymer Dispersions for Solid Electrolyte Capacitors ecadigitallibrary com Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Electronic Components Panasonic Industrial Devices www panasonic com John Prymak Kemet Replacing MnO2 with Polymers 1999 CARTS F Jonas H C Starck Baytron Basic chemical and physical properties Prasentation 2003 www hcstarck de Ch Schnitter A Michaelis U Merker H C Starck Bayer New Niobium Based Materials for Solid Electrolyte Capacitors Carts 2002 T Zednicek S Sita C McCracken W A Millman J Gill AVX Niobium Oxide Technology Roadmap CARTS 2002 8 Archived 2014 02 24 at the Wayback Machine Y Pozdeev Freeman P Maden Vishay Solid Electrolyte Niobium Capacitors Exhibit Similar Performance to Tantalum Feb 1 2002 9 Shigeru Uzawa Akihiko Komat u Tetsushi Ogawara Rubycon Corporation Ultra Low Impedance Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor with Water based Electrolyte or Science Links Japan Ultra Low Impedance Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor with Water based Electrolyte Archived from the original on 2012 05 24 Retrieved 2016 02 05 J L Stevens T R Marshall A C Geiculescu m C R Feger T F Strange Carts USA 2006 The Effects of Electrolyte Composition on the Deformation Characteristics of Wet Aluminum ICD Capacitors 10 Archived 2014 11 26 at the Wayback Machine Alfonso Berduque Zongli Dou Rong Xu KEMET Electrochemical Studies for Aluminium Electrolytic Capacitor Applications Corrosion Analysis of Aluminium in Ethylene Glycol Based Electrolytes PDF Archived 2016 12 28 at the Wayback Machine Hillman Helmold 2004 Identification of Missing or Insufficient Electrolyte Constituents in Failed Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors PDF DFR solutions Ch Reynolds AVX Technical Information Reliability Management of Tantalum Capacitors PDF Archived 2013 08 06 at the Wayback Machine a b c J Gill AVX Surge in Solid Tantalum Capacitors PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 12 14 Retrieved 2015 01 02 a b c A Teverovsky Perot Systems Code 562 NASA GSFCE Effect of Surge Current Testing on Reliability of Solid Tantalum Capacitors ecadigitallibrary com Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Imam A M Condition Monitoring of Electrolytic Capacitors for Power Electronics Applications Dissertation Georgia Institute of Technology 2007 smartech gatech edu Nichicon General Description of Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors PDF Archived 2018 02 05 at the Wayback Machine section 2 3 2 Reverse Voltage Rubycon Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors FAQ CDM Cornell Dubilier Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor Application Guide p 4 and p 6 and p 9 I Bishop J Gill AVX Ltd Reverse Voltage Behavior of Solid Tantalum Capacitors PDF P Vasina T Zednicek Z Sita J Sikula J Pavelka AVX Thermal and Electrical Breakdown Versus Reliability of Ta2O5 Under Both Bipolar Biasing Conditions PDF Archived 2013 08 06 at the Wayback Machine A Berduque Kemet Low ESR Aluminium Electrolytic Capacitors for Medium to High Voltage Applications kemet com permanent dead link Solutions DfR Resources DfR Solutions PDF www dfrsolutions com a b c Vishay BCcomponents Introduction Aluminum Capacitors Revision 10 Sep 13 1 Document Number 28356 PDF Archived 2016 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Vishay Engineering Solutions Aluminum Capacitors in Power Supplies PDF Panasonic Use technique of Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 12 14 Retrieved 2015 01 02 CDE Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor Application Guide PDF Nichicon Application Guidelines for Aluminum Electolytic Capacitors PDF Evox Rifa Electrolytic Capacitors Application Guide PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 01 12 Retrieved 2015 01 02 I Salisbury AVX Thermal Management of Surface Mounted Tantalum Capacitors 11 Archived 2013 08 06 at the Wayback Machine R W Franklin AVX Ripple Rating of Tantalum Chip Capacitors PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 25 Retrieved 2015 01 02 Vishay Application Notes AC Ripple Current Calculations Solid Tantalum Capacitors 12 KEMET Ripple Current Capabilities Technical Update 2004 Vitoratos E Sakkopoulos S Dalas E Paliatsas N Karageorgopoulos D Petraki F Kennou S Choulis S 2009 Thermal degradation mechanisms of PEDOT PSS Organic Electronics 10 61 66 doi 10 1016 j orgel 2008 10 008 hdl 20 500 14279 837 Vishay Aluminium capacitors Introduction Revision 10 Sep 13 1 Document Number 28356 Chapter Storage page 7 vishay com Archived 2016 01 26 at the Wayback Machine a b Ch Baur N Will Epcos Long term stability of aluminum electrolytic capacitors Built to last Archived 2015 01 28 at the Wayback Machine R W Franklin AVX AN EXPLORATION OF LEAKAGE CURRENT PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2020 07 25 Retrieved 2014 12 14 Kemet Polymer Tantalum Chip Capacitors PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 11 23 Retrieved 2015 01 02 AVX ANALYSIS OF SOLID TANTALUM CAPACITOR LEAKAGE CURRENT PDF CDE Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitor Application Guide PDF Understand Capacitor Soakage to Optimize Analog Systems by Bob Pease 1982 13 Archived 2010 01 23 at the Wayback Machine Modeling Dielectric Absorption in Capacitors by Ken Kundert NIC Components Corp Passive Components PDF www niccomp com Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 12 14 IEC EN 61709 Electric components Reliability Reference conditions for failure rates and stress models for conversion MIL HDBK 217 F NOTICE 2 RELIABILITY PREDICTION Electronic www everyspec com SQC online table calculator Capacitor Failure Rate Model MIL HDBK 217 Rev F Notice 2 14 Vishay Vishay Capacitors Vishay Silicon Capacitance Calculator www vishay com Hitachi Precautions in using Tantalum Capacitors 4 2 Failure Rate Calculation Formula 15 Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine a b c Sam G Parler Cornell Dubilier Reliability of CDE Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors PDF Archived 2014 06 10 at the Wayback Machine a b c T Zednicek AVX A Study of Field Crystallization in Tantalum Capacitors and its effect on DCL and Reliability 16 a b c A Albertsen Jianghai Europe Reliability of Electrolytic Capacitors PDF Archived 2020 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Hitachi aic europe Explanations to the useful life PDF Archived 2016 02 05 at the Wayback Machine NCC Technical Note Judicious Use of Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors PDF Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Rubycon LIFE OF ALUMINUM ELECTROLYTIC CAPACITORS S 9 PDF Archived 2015 08 07 at the Wayback Machine A Albertsen Jianghai Electrolytic Capacitor Lifetime Estimation PDF Archived 2013 01 08 at the Wayback Machine Snap In HU aic europe com Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 a b c Epcos Aluminum electrolytic capacitors General technical information PDF Panasonic 10 degree rule PDF Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine NIC Life expectancy of aluminum electrolytic capacitors rev 1 PDF Archived 2015 08 24 at the Wayback Machine Gregory Mirsky Determining end of life ESR and lifetime calculations for electrolytic capacitors at higher temperatures EDN August 20 2008 edn com E Vitoratos S Sakkopoulos E Dalas N Paliatsas D Karageorgopoulos F Petraki S Kennou S A Choulis Thermal degradation mechanisms of PEDOT PSS Organic Electronics Volume 10 Issue 1 February 2009 Pages 61 66 17 Nichicon Technical Guide Calculation Formula of Lifetime PDF Estimating of Lifetime FUJITSU MEDIA DEVICES LIMITED PDF Archived 2013 12 24 at the Wayback Machine NIC Technical Guide Calculation Formula of Lifetime Archived from the original on 2013 09 15 Retrieved 2013 10 02 a b VISHAY DC LEAKAGE FAILURE MODE PDF Archived 2018 11 26 at the Wayback Machine a b c d J Gill T Zednicek AVX VOLTAGE DERATING RULES FOR SOLID TANTALUM AND NIOBIUM CAPACITORS 18 Archived 2013 08 06 at the Wayback Machine a b c d R Faltus AVX Advanced capacitors ensure long term control circuit stability 7 2 2012 EDT 19 コンデンサメーカー一覧サイト 固体コンデンサ Solid capacitor capacitor web fc2 com Commission IEC International Electrotechnical Welcome to the IEC International Electrotechnical Commission www iec ch Welcome to the IEC Webstore webstore iec ch Beuth Verlag Normen und Fachliteratur seit 1924 www beuth de Electronic Capacitors SIC 3675 NAICS 334414 Electronic Capacitor Manufacturing Industry report 20 Further reading editThe Electrolytic Capacitor 1st Ed Alexander Georgiev Murray Hill Books 191 pages 1945 archive External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Electrolytic capacitors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electrolytic capacitor amp oldid 1206110168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.